Posts Tagged ‘internet browsers’

Time for Google to punish…itself?

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

On Tuesday, Google had to penalize it’s own web browser, Google Chrome, for violating Google’s guidelines against paid links. The action was taken because of blog posts that were part of a marketing campaign for Chrome gone bad. As the story unfolds, it looks like Google agreed to buy online video ads but did not approve the sponsored posts campaign.

Aaron Wall of SEO Book wrote a blog post on January 2 pointing out the paid links. The marketing campaign included paying bloggers to write generic, favorable posts about Google Chrome that linked to a video about the benefits of using the browser for small business. Wall pointed out that when he searched “This post is sponsored by Google”, over 400 results were found, giving scope to the size of the marketing campaign and the number of links it generated. That disclaimer itself, usually found at the beginning or end of the blog post, also linked to the Google Chrome download page in at least one case.

By paying those bloggers to write favorable posts about Google Chrome, Google was also paying them to include the links. Since the blog posts also included the video, it can be said they were also buying views of the video. Per Google’s Webmaster Guidelines, “Buying and selling links is a normal part of the economy of the web when done for advertising purposes, and not for manipulation of search results.” To prevent paid links from impacting search engine results, Google suggests that paid links should contain a “nofollow” tag, which prevents the link from affecting PageRank. However, not all of the offending blog posts used “nofollow” links.

People in the industry are upset not only because of Google buying the links. Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Land explains in his coverage Google’s fight “against paid links and ‘thin’ content,” both of which the campaign produced. PageRank not only takes into account quantity, but also quality of links. The sponsored blog posts are said to be examples of the “thin” content that the Google Panda update was supposed to fight against.

Google’s stance on paid links received a lot of attention last year, when Google banned companies such as JCPenney, Forbes, and Overstock for using them. As for Google Chrome, a Google spokesman released this statement via email: “We’ve investigated and are taking manual action to demote www.google.com/chrome and lower the site’s PageRank for a period of at least 60 days.” The head of Google’s web spam team, Matt Cutts says in a post on Google+, “After that, someone on the Chrome side can submit a reconsideration request documenting their clean-up just like any other company would.”

As a result of the punishment, Google Chrome went from the second result of a search for “browser” to the bottom of the fifth page of results and has been reported sinking as low as position #73. Search Engine Land also reported that Chrome’s ranking lowered in searches for other terms such as “web browser” and “internet browser.” The Chrome download page doesn’t even rank when searching for “chrome,” “chrome browser,” and “google chrome.” Instead, a help page on Chrome installation has become the top result. When the Chrome download page does appear in results, it does so only as a sitelink.

Do you think this punishment Google placed on itself is fair? With only one violation found so far, do you think it’s too harsh, or is it appropriate for Google to place harsher punishments on itself, who “should know better”?

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The Social Media Browser

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

Last week, I read something about a “Facebook browser,” otherwise known as RockMelt, a social media web browser with your favorite social media features built-in.  It sounded interesting, but I didn’t think it would live up to its hype.  After downloading it on my personal computer and playing around over the weekend, I have come to this informed conclusion: It’s pretty awesome.

I try a lot of different browsers and apps frequently, but rarely does one stay installed on my computer for any extended period of time.  As an extensive user of the Internet, I tend to be picky about how I access it.  But ladies and gentleman, I have found my new favorite internet browser.

Let me walk you through some of RockMelt’s key features, and I’m sure after reading this you’ll be eager to try it yourself!

Chrome-based. RockMelt is based on Google’s open-source project, Chromium.  This means that it looks almost exactly like the Google Chrome web browser.  You can even choose from all the same themes/skins and import saved passwords and bookmarks.  It was all very easy to set up, and now I actually forget that I’m using a different browser.

Built-in Facebook features. RockMelt has an expandable sidebar (called “edges” in this browser) for Facebook chat, where you can sort your friends into lists, see who is online, and start a chat with a friend through the bar on the bottom of the browser.  You can also view your notifications, messages, and friend requests from the top of your browser, and share a link on your wall, all without actually going to facebook.com.

App Edge. On one side of your browser, you have the Facebook Chat edge.  On the other, you can choose to have RSS feeds for your frequently visited sites.  Possibilities include Twitter (even multiple Twitter accounts), YouTube, and ANY website that has a RSS link.  The edge also has a “Read Later” app, so you can tag any website, tweet, or article and save it for later.

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