Who Links To Me is a fairly popular tool - Yahoo reports almost one million backlinks. A simple site, it simply reports quickly on your backlinks and PageRank.
But whats this! The PageRank image is directly from Blog Flux PageRank Checker. There is a little link on the bottom (almost impossible to see), and even better, they nofollowed the link!
In between all the damn SEO spam on the site (I counted 47 obvious SEO text-links) they have to nofollow our link.
Steal our bandwidth, nofollow our link, and throw us in the muddy water with a crapload of bad neighbourhood links.
And don’t even ask permission.
Good to know Mr. Shanti is a class-act.
In the end I just defaulted everyone to PR2 - it may continue to eat up our bandwidth, but it is far more satisfactory ![]()
The title I chose pretty much sums up what Original Signal does.
On the face of it, it is one very purty website. No ads, the site displays headlines from the most influential blogs in each category, and even has a nice popup that only shows a a teaser of the content (even with a full feed). Their only source of monetization seems to be their search box on the top - using a Yahoo feed, the top links are sponsored. Some people may have problems with that (after all none of the content is ‘theirs’) but I do not really have a problem with that.
No siree - my problem is with their links.
The first link I saw was to TechCrunch, and as his habit of mine, I looked at the url. Instead of a simple direct link or even tracking link, its a full blow url: http://web20.originalsignal.com/article/4845/stalk-your-contact-list-with-upscoop.html
Why do they need such a URL? Hrmm I thought - maybe to prettify it. So I checked for a robots.txt file - nada. Nothing, zilch. This was odd - a full blown internal link, and no notification to robots that they should not be spidering the page.
Only one reasonable explanation, and one easy check: see how many pages Google has indexed for the site.
And there we have our beautiful back-stab. You find URLs like http://buzz.originalsignal.com/article/431824/acer-computer-pdoduct.html and http://movies.originalsignal.com/article/14405/carmen-loves-praying.html (among many others). Google clocks the site in with over 3,000 pages. I do not follow SEO news much now, but a while back there was a huge-stink about 302 Redirects. Basically sites were doing 302 redirects for outbound links (which to an end user got them to their destination) but confused search engines. When a site with a lot of trust/pagerank (ie Original Signal) did this, search engines would often times rank the offending site (ie Original Signal) and obliterate the original site with a dupe penalty.
And this is exactly what Original Signal is doing. They could link directly to the source (like popurls). If they really wanted to track clicks, all they would have had to do was link to something like out.php?id=xxx or /out/xxx. They could then block it from robots (so that spiders wouldn’t get confused) or use a proper 301 redirect. Nope - they instead chose to build a full url scheme. Users get absolutely nothing out it. Search engine spiders the pages.
Congratulations on helping pollute the web.
“How do I get more traffic to my site?”
This has to be one of the most commonly asked questions on forums like SitePoint and WebmasterWorld
Invariably, the answer is always the same:
Write great content and people will link to you.
What a bunch of poppycock.
There is a lot of great content out there. People who spend hours writing one single article, re-writing it multiple times so that it is flows nicely, conveys its points across, and doesn’t bore the user. But that is far from enough. You write this great content - how does it get found? It isn’t that Google sends out some magical gnome to check on your content. No, you have to put your head down and promote your site non-stop.
As I mentioned in my earlier post about web hosting directories, the amount of riff-raff at the top is astounding. There are legitimate directories out there, but none rank at the top. In fact, the ones ranking at the top are the most void of content. What they did they did beautifully - they promoted and promoted and promoted. It is almost like fighting in the trenches - very grinding, very boring, but very important.
Now I do want to step back and say that unique content is important. High quality content is important. But without promoting it, you fantastic unique content will go no where. Unique content with no promotion vs so-so content with promotion results in the so-so content beating down the unique content.
Lets take the example of this blog. It currently has 33 subscribers. I can say half of them came from ProBlogger.net (Darren Rowse). Jacob took the time to email him about blog resources in demand. While the content was useful (or so I like to believe), without having emailed him, Darren would have had no clue that such a post existed.
Yet there is a silver lining. Once your blog (or site) is popular enough, then unique content is fantastic. Just look at Life Hacker or TechCrunch. Those guys have taken the time to write great content and promote it. They are now in a position where tens of thousands of people read what they say every day. So when they do post useful unique content, it gets disseminated, fast. It appears on Digg. It appears on Del.icio.us. Links to their post spread like wildfire, and everyone sees it within a few days.
But those are the anomalies. They have worked hard to get where they are. For everyone else - you have to promote your content. Every time you post something useful, find 15-50 sites that would find your content interesting. My biggest site gets over 100,000 unique visitors a day. During its 6 year history, I have sent out at least 15,000 emails. No spam, nothing automated - every single one individually written. It was exhausting, but it paid off handsomely. The emails got the webmasters to my site, and the unique content compelled them to link to my site.
Quite a lot of people have talked about how Wikipedia will become a search engine sponge with its use of nofollow for all external links. Best of those articles was one by Nicholas Carr, in which he talked about and linked to various blog posts about how, with all the inbound links Wikipedia has, it’s poweress in search engine rankings would only grow.
I do have to agree with them. I can understand and even relate to Wikipedia’s problem (on a smaller scale). Blog Top Sites gets roughly 200 submissions a day, and with the amount of spam coming in, we eventually had to take the route of only allowing in sites we had approved. It is a very real problem, and it is a nasty headache.
Yet what Wikipedia has done is admit defeat. It is admitted that its own editors cannot keep up with the deluge of spam. It has become a monolithic structure (one that essentially refuses to acknowledge others). I would go so far to say that it was irresponsible of them - based on their entire community ethos, they have to recognize the importance that Wikipedia plays in search engines. Sticking your head in the sand and pretending that search engines are not affected by Wikipedia is delusional.

It will be interesting to look at the above graph after six months.
Of course, bashing something isn’t fair unless you propose an alternative path. Just like they force logged in users to edit semi-protected pages, why not only force logged in users to add links? At least try it out - what do they have to lose?
Beyond what Google, Yahoo, MSN, and Ask (I’m including CitySearch) offer, there are a lot of other local search/review websites. To name the notable:
So we have six websites, all duking it out with the four big boys of the internet. And as almost always happens in a fragmented market, problems are starting to rear.
InsiderPages just went through some big layoffs. Zipingo really hasn’t made much of a splash, and with Google’s recent partnership with Inuit, may just be pushed aside. Judy’s Book was forced to change its plan to survive (but still has great value in its existing review-base). Yelp is the golden boy, chugging along, but has raised over $15 million. TrueLocal admittedly a different breed - it is actually sells its data. And local.com - well they seem to have already started the acquisition game, picking up soUno to build up its revenue stream.
The fact that none of them are profitable (except for TrueLocal) will lead to some casualties in the upcoming year. My prediction is that by the end of the year, only Yelp, TrueLocal, and Local.com will still exist. My prediction for the other three:
Others are launching - ie Mojo Pages. I don’t see them surviving long either - their blog focuses a lot on accounting and usability, but absolutely none on actually reaching mass market (which is the problem IP and Yelp really suffered from). I predict a quick demise for them also.
Second Life this, Second Life that.
I ran across the funny little parody Get a First Life when it was mentioned on TechCrunch.
Parodies are a great way to get a point across, provided people understand that it is a parody (when I see people taking Colbert seriously as a right-wing ‘pundit’, I shake my head). And if there is anything that needs to be gotten across, it is this: Second Life is over-rated
For those that have read my about page, you will know that I was once very intimately acquainted with MMOs and their large virtual worlds. Second Life was then, and still is, cumbersome, confusing, and crap. There, I said it.
Back in 2004 I met the Linden Labs fellows. I was hanging around with the IGE folk, and they were very close to having a deal signed. In fact, they did have a verbal agreement. They would provide the backend/market, and Linden Labs would sanction them as the ‘official’ company to go to. It would be win-win - Linden would get much needed income flow (the ‘world’ was floundering), and IGE would get its first official backing.
I left IGE soon after that (I was always marked as an independent contractor), and the deal never went through. From what my sources told me, Linden Labs had inflated the numbers, and having gotten greedy, had pushed out IGE in favor of setting up their own system.
So there are two things I want to raise issue with:
I will end with one final comparison. A 2006 year in review post by Terra Nova stated that Second Life’s peak concurrency was 20,000. I remember EverQuest 1 hit a concurrency of 100,000 when it had 500,000 paying subscribers. Second Life just does not warrant all the attention it gets.
Elena, the super-talented lead-designer at Design Disease (now a part of our BloggyNetwork) is currently updating the site to be a bit more … beautiful. Its like me, webdesignified.
And no, this isn’t my post for the day ![]()
If there is any niche that has abused (and raped and pillaged) the definition of a ‘website directory’, the honor definitely belongs to web hosting directories.
I just did a search for web hosting directory on Google. Lets look at the top 10 sites:
There is so many crappy websites out there claiming to be a web hosting directory it makes me gag. My above list only factors in ’sponsors’ - when you start adding the fake ‘reviews’ thrown in there that do nothing more than shill for the top paying hosting companies - gag x 2.
So whats a person like me to do? Write his own web hosting directory. More on that soon
UPDATE January 29: It is now live.
I have a long history with topsites. My first ‘big’ site (over 5,000 uniques a day) was Game Sites 200. It was an absolute juggernaut when it came to top lists - just look at these stats. When I sold it a while ago, it was getting over 100,000 unique visitors a day, and its yearly earnings was almost $200,000. That ain’t chump change. To put that in perspective, that is almost 4x the most popular blog on Blog Top Sites. Game Sites 200 generated over 250,000 clicks for the consistently top-voted sites.
I soon tired of the vote based system. Voting was a flawed mechanism. Because GS200 was such a source of traffic, often times webmasters would take their own websites hostage and demand visitors vote for them or that the site would be shutdown. Its both humbling and annoying - humbling in the sense that your website is so important, and annoying because people are inconveniencing users under your name. Throw in popups, spammers, bots, trick votes, and you have a recipe for a headache.
So when Jacob started to talk to me about working together on something, a topsites for blogs is what came to my mind. We would use Jacob’s network & my programming knowledge in topsites (I was busy with other stuff at that time) to combine our forces. Shades of Captain Planet.
The product, Blog Top Sites, has been a runaway success. Game Sites 200 was tough because we weren’t the first. For blogs, we were. And after Darren Rowse added us to his sidebar, it just took off. According to Technorati, we have over 10,500 links. Just counting our four most popular categories (Entertainment, Personal, Technology, and 1,000,000 for Blog Catalog and (almost) 1,000,000 for Blog Flux Directory puts Blog Top Sites in rare company.
But that isn’t the point. The point is how all I keep getting is copied. Over and over and over.
With Game Sites 200 there are dozens of toplists that copied every single category of Game Sites 200. Everytime we added a new category, it would magically appear on all the others. Ultimate Top 200 went so far as to use the exact same design as us (our old design), the exact same menu structure/style, and everything else in between. To add a bit of irony, they use evoTopsites, a product we created (before we spun off Evo-Dev) but did not actually use for Game Sites 200.
And the same thing exists with Blog Top Sites. Dozens of clones, that have all copied our categories and our appearance and our structure. Even our site details and what not is ripped off. I state this categorically because I modified the Blog Top Sites look from the original evoTopsites look. And yet they all look like Blog Top Sites.
Of course, none of them match the amount of traffic Blog Top Sites tracks. But still - annoying. Do something new!
The amount of information whirring around is manic. Furthermore, information is agnostic in value - it can be useful, not useful, it can be true, it can be false, and it can be a combination of all four.
I try to keep my RSS feed list as small as possible. The total number of feeds I am subscribed to right now is 70. Most of them are work-related, and a few are just plain interesting/thought-provoking (eg indexed and PostSecret).
My rule of being subscribed to a feed is simple. Five (formerly six) possible reasons:
Even more important than keeping track of blogs is keeping track of comments. When you post a comment, knowing what follows is very important. Blogs that do not allow comments suck (only one I subscribe to that doesn’t allow comments is Seth’s Blog). Comments are where the real meat of information is, and skipping over that can be foolhardy (and maybe why people have 1000+ feeds subscribed to). To keep track of comments, I use Commentful (top secret notice: we have acquired the site and will be integrated it with Blog Flux soon). Any time I find a blog/forum post I want to track (even if I don’t cinnent), I add it to Commentful. After that it notifies me with a nice little green light in my FF statusbar. No need to visit each page or leave them open in a tab (which is what I used to) or subscribe to the entire comments feed. I instantly know what is going on and when.
The last thing is - email. I actually keep 5 primary emails (through Thunderbird). All the rest of the sites then forward to my one ‘collector’ email or are answered by an employee. Thunderbird Notify keeps my email a click-away in the taskbar, and I have it set to check every 60 minutes. Anything less than 60 minutes becomes distracting. This way I also answer all my emails as I get them.
Any other ways readers here deal with all the information out there?