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Monday, March 1, 2010

Social Sites in SEO

Above the last 5 to 10 years now social sites have become very popular. They seem to be popping up on the internet more and more. With millions of people getting online and searching for something to do while their on there.

Many of us who have ever been on these sites have noticed that some seem better than others. The sites that seem to be doing really well, with lots of members are Face book and Twitter. These two site let you just write a very small message letting people tell others what they're doing at the time. It's easy to leave messages about almost anything. You can even leave things like what you have written on other sites so that people can go and take a look at them. It's not a bad way to make friends and have them want to follow in what you're doing.

My yearbook, Yuwie and a new social site called, People string is others site that you can make friends on. My yearbook is more like a dating site than anything else. But, Yuwie and People string are sites that pay you to use the site. These two sites let you do all kinds of things. Keep a blog, play games, send messages to friends. But, there is a drawback to them though. For you to make any kind of money you need to bring in referrals. That has been my problem and because I don't know that many people to bring into those sites. I haven't been making all that much money.

There are ways to bring in people. You can set up ads on traffic sites. You can try to do anything, but it will be a slow process. Social sites do have their draw backs. You may make friends but most of the time you really don't keep in touch with them. If youre looking for more than friends then, they can be very good for that. Each one of these sites has some of the same things on them. Not too much is different between them. I think that using these sites are all up the person that joins them.

One major reason that social sites were made was to bring a whole bunch of people together from all over the world. Not having to worry about what someone thinks of you is another one. I think that making new friends and meeting people from all over the world is important to use and these sites can give us a great way of doing that. Opens up your mind and heart to someone that is from a different country and learning something about them and where they live. That is a good thing.

If you're interested in wanting to know more about these sites you can look them up. Finding out more for you is always best.

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Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Gift Urbane Collision to Your Website

SEO is the technique of creation or changing particular websites to enable it rightly read and indexed by major search engines. Major search engines such as Yahoo and Google send computer applets like robots or spiders to scan your sites. It is the duty of an optimizer to understand how to present these programs with the information searched by people to help search engines to define the value of your website. SEO brings more visitors, greater customer retention and increased brand awareness. These are the features which made SEO one of the well accepted and effective internet marketing services.

Efficiency and functionality of SEO largely depends on the keywords. Only excellent keyword choices, charmingly written source code and clearly presented contents etc can earn good and long term results. Search engines instigate several changes to guarantee quality results for the user and commercial prosperity for the website owner. It is the excellent SEO tactic which brings outstanding popularity and strong visibility for websites in search engines. Affordable SEO services are not impossible in current competitive world. There are several companies offering good and applicable SEO services at fairly decent price rates. SEO take advantage of link building, Google Adsence, content management etc to modify the site to easily get indexed by the search engines.

Providing reliable and sensible SEO services is a matter of experience and expertise in the field. Only a well versed and highly experienced expert can deliver unique and unmatched SEO services. He should be sound in all aspects of computer applets and impacts and should have the capacity to make the websites easily detected by search engines. It is the catchy contents which yields the attention of readers towards the particular products and services. So a SEO professional should have profound knowledge in content management to provide relevant information on particular keywords. There is several SEO services company India offering good and narrative information on particular keywords.

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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Hackers Using Search Engine Optimization and Social Media

IT outsourcing users need to be aware that hackers are ever more utilizing social networks and search engine optimization (SEO), according to an expert. Javier Merchan, a spokesman for Panda Security, pointed out that the spread of the internet into Web 2.0 and the rise of the search engine has made circumstances easier for hackers and more criminals are looking into how they can exploit technology.

"Social networks and SEO attacks are just new platforms for cybercriminals. They are using old and new techniques to infect as many people as possible," he commented. The envoy also claimed that there should be more consciousness of the dangers of malware such as Trojans and fake anti-virus applications among corporate IT users, as more people are being targeted by these.

A recent report from Panda Security suggested that 13.7 per cent of searches for buzz words or current affairs directed people to malware in the second half of 2009.Also, cybercriminals and spammers boosted their presence on social networking websites, especially those which host user-generated content.

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Monday, July 27, 2009

Link exchanges: The poor man's SEO

by Tom Krazit

Large Internet companies spend millions on consultants and technology trying to get their sites to rank among the highest results on Google. Everyone else has to rely on the poor man's search-engine optimization: the link exchange.

If you've ever hung up your own shingle on the Web, you've probably gotten an e-mail to this effect at some point: "Dear So-and-so, I believe your site and mine could benefit from exchanging links." We probably get eight to 10 a week in the CNET News general mailbox, mostly from technology-related companies but occasionally from auto-parts suppliers and watch retailers who either have no idea what we do or few moral qualms about spam.

The idea is that if you can coax a link out of a large site like CNET, Google and other search engines will record that link as a vote of confidence in your site's worthiness and improve your ranking in searches for certain topics, thereby boosting traffic to your site. The technique is quite old, dating back even before Google and its PageRank system emerged as the Web's dominant search engine.

But does it still work? And at what point do two or three sites struggling to get off the ground veer off the road from mutual assistance to a full-blown spam operation designed to game the system?

Evan Duffield, for one, thinks it still works. He contacted us trying to get CNET to exchange links with WarpedAI.com, a site he has launched to promote stock-trading tools for day traders, and says he has been able to slowly build up the PageRank of another site he owns using techniques that don't run afoul of Google's Webmaster guidelines.

"It's kind of a vicious circle," he said. "To start a new business you need PageRank, but to get PageRank you need links to your service. You have to get the ball rolling."

PageRank is the currency of the Web. Google's novel approach to site indexing way back when was to evaluate the worthiness of a site based on how many other sites were linking to it, also taking into account the worthiness of the sites passing along the links. This meant, and still does mean, that a link from a site with a high PageRank counts for way more than a link from a site with low PageRank.

But how do you get a link from one of those sites? Google's official advice: "The best way to get other sites to create relevant links to yours is to create unique, relevant content that can quickly gain popularity in the Internet community." That, of course, sounds like something your mother would say.

In a Web as vast as this one, getting attention for a new site, even one with superb content, is a very difficult undertaking. Bloggers can discuss each other's work and help each other build up a following, but if you're selling a product or service it can be much more difficult to climb the ranks of search results for things like "day-trading software" when you're starting from scratch.

So Webmasters like Duffield turn to solicitations for links. Danny Sullivan, who writes about search-engine optimization for Search Engine Land, says "if you're a new site, absolutely you want to be doing link building. But you need to be doing that in a smart fashion."

Duffield says he's very careful to only solicit links from sites that are related to his product: his pitch for exchanging links that somehow wound up at our doorstep was addressed to computer-go@computer-go.org, a mailing list for hobbyists trying to tackle the difficult chore of building a computer AI system for the ancient game of go.

That was a mistake, he said; the result of prematurely hitting send on an e-mail template. Duffield compiles his targets by searching for sites that are related to finance and stock trading, and attempts to contact a general e-mail address to pass along his site's information and offer a link exchange.

"It's not about the actual links so much as it is optimizing search queries," Duffield said. "When I figure out a query I want from Google, I can see the top three positions have this much page rank and this many positions, and try to beat that out."

As long as people like Duffield are exchanging links without offering payment, or crossing obvious lines such as breaking captchas and posting spam links in guestbooks or comment forums, they're following the spirit of Google's Webmaster guidelines.

"Where it tends to get into tricky issues is where people are doing it primarily for payment," Sullivan said. "Search engines would see links as votes. Google does not like that people would simply be buying links to do better.

While paid links are clearly off-limits, Google appears to ban link exchanges in general, saying it does not allow "excessive link exchanging" but failing to define exactly what constitutes "excessive." Other practices that are verboten include links to "bad neighborhoods" on the Web and complicated networks of several Web sites with little content but pages and pages of links amongst themselves that Google can usually identify.

For the most part, however, the practice is rampant enough that only the most egregious violations get snagged. "If you start thinking too much about not getting caught, you're probably doing things you shouldn't be doing," Sullivan said.

In an era where SEO is a budding industry unto itself, link exchanges are perhaps the most basic approach. Far below the realm of those dithering over Google's search index are those like Duffield trying to make something out of literally nothing.

While he needs to build PageRank equity to get started, Duffield acknowledges that at a certain point that Google is right: a site will live or die on its content. Link exchanges only work to get one's name out there: the real boost needed to turn a Web site into a business comes when real people start discussing and linking to a service on blogs, message forums, and social-networking sites.

That's when your search ranking (and therefore traffic) really starts to grow, he said. "If you can make Google see that something is being talked about all over the Internet, what choice do they have?"

[cnet]

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