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A while back all backlinks were good, and webmasters struggled to get as many as possible, as quickly as possible.
A
while back all backlinks were good, and webmasters struggled to get as many as
possible, as quickly as possible. Then black hat SEO came along, as some
“experts” with shady practices quickly realized the potential of this market
segment, and soon there were paid links and link farms everywhere – to the point
that a new website with almost no content could skyrocket in search results
overnight, taking over many legitimate, long-established sited on the same
topic.
And now search
engines have to fight to stop this trend. It's going to be a long battle, and
there will be collateral victims in the process – inexperienced webmasters who
fell for the black hat hype, or who made mistakes without knowing the ins and
outs of this business. And, without a doubt, there will always be ways to cheat
search engines, and some creative entrepreneurs will always find such ways –
even if in some cases it may take more effort than legitimately increasing a
site's ranking with acceptable, ethical methods.
The best
known, and most discussed attempts to cut the number of paid backlinks were, of
course, Google's famous algorithm updates, Panda and Penguin, but most other
search engines have taken similar steps. Cute naming strategies from the market
leader, but a lot of webmasters have had nightmares with pandas and penguins
eating into their rankings during the past months.
While the
updates have helped clear up some paid backlinks and link farms, there's still a
long way to go, and now search engines admitted the need for human input, along
with algorithm changes. Therefore, both Google and Bing introduced new tools
allowing the webmasters to reject, or disavow backlinks, if they notice a
spamming problem.
For most
webmasters, this should present no problem at all, and it's very likely that 90%
of them won't ever use this tool. The other 10% however cheered the
announcement, as it does introduce a lot more control over a site's situation
than ever before. There have been reports of dodgy practices in the past, with
webmasters trying to take down competition by using black hat SEO for their
competitors' websites. Now, this shouldn't be possible
anymore.
There are, of
course, certain risks involved in using this tool, and one may accidentally
remove legitimate backlinks – and
that's the last thing you want to do, considering how difficult it is to obtain
those in the first place. As with everything else, if it's not broken, don't try
to fix it – there's no point in toying around with this tool, if you have no
reports of spamming or unnatural links, as you may end up doing more harm than
good.
The most
important thing to remember from all this is a very simple one: all these
efforts put into improving the best practices in this area indicate that
backlinks will
remain one of the most important factors used by search engines when they
evaluate a website. Therefore, the efforts to obtain them in legitimate ways
should intensify, as they can only become more and more valuable as time goes
by. |