Several major websites have seen their
Google Pagerank score drop in what is being
called a major offensive against so-called paid links.
Industry news blog SearchEngineLand has
recorded a massive
drop in the Pagerank score of dozens of major news sites and blogs over the last
days.
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Pagerank is the formula Google uses to determine the order in which search
results appear. It is based mainly on the number of sites that link to a URL,
but also takes other factors into consideration. A link from a highly ranked
website is believed to carry more weight than one from a low ranking one.
Many are speculating that the drops are indicative of a larger campaign by
Google against the practice of selling links. Some sites have leveraged their
Google Pagerank to sell links as a type of advertising space.
A Google spokesperson told vnunet.com that "our opinion of the forward links
for a site" can play a role in a site's pagerank. But he also stressed that
other factors also play a part in the recent changes.
If the drops are part of an effort to crush the sale of links, however, it
may not pay off for Google. Many bloggers say that the Pagerank drop will have
no effect on the way in which they run their sites.
"Google slaps down a bunch of prominent people, lets the buzz take over and
hopes that the warning shot would be taken seriously by the rest of the
blogosphere,"
wrote
Aaron Brazell, director of technology for blog network
b5 media.
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