Google Biz Dev Beats the Google Engineers Again
Last Updated on Monday, 12 December 2011 01:12 Written by a2e Monday, 12 December 2011 01:12
Since Panda has happened I (and others) have highlighted how brands have ranked doorway pages, ranked scraped 3rd party content, padded out crap “content farm” content to suck in search traffic, took their market leading position & used it to deliver inferior experiences, bought out bankrupt competitors & redirected the PageRank, engaged in off-topic affiliate extension (Barnes & Noble, Overstock, Overstock AND Barnes & Noble), etc etc etc
At the same time, independent webmasters face greater uncertainty than ever (legal, personal property rights, and from alleged “quality” algorithms like Panda & editorial crackdowns from Google engineers).
If you are not operating at scale, you are an inefficiency which must be expunged from the marketplace.
I have maintained that Panda was a joke & a diversion to re-frame the quality debate as Google dialed up on inserting their own vertical results in the search results, allowing them to monetize the “organic” search results.
Such a view may have been seen as cynical, but it is something that more people are realizing as true. Read this great article from Tom Foremski on ZDNet.
Google’s percent of downstream traffic to YouTube has more than doubled since Panda.
You know how John Stewart or George Carlin have to present reality as a joke to express it? Well watch the above video & then read this article:
“Every single leading company is waiting for user-generated content or is licensing content” in order to reach advertisers, Rosenblatt said. “YouTube was tired of waiting. They told us that they needed a home and garden channel, a pets channel and a health/Livestrong channel. They are paying us up front, plus a rev share. This is the beginning of them funding professional content creators.”
I have mentioned Demand Media’s video “efforts” before.
But my opinion doesn’t matter.
As a monopoly, only Google’s does.
And they decided to subsidize Demand Media while torching your site.
Cloaking: Survey Says?
Last Updated on Monday, 12 December 2011 01:10 Written by a2e Monday, 12 December 2011 01:10
In the below video Matt Cutts states that “there is no such thing as white hat cloaking” …
… yet Google is testing a new ad unit where users have to fill out a survey before they can view the content.
How long until the surveys include something like:
- did you vote in 2008
- what presidential candidate did you vote for
- how do you feel about issue x
- how strongly do you feel about your opinion on x
Then after the survey: “Thanks for your feedback. Candidate y supports your views on issue x.”
Advertisers then get a report like: “in Ohio, 84% of the 289,319 swing voters with an average household income between $32,400 and $67,250 think issue x is vitally important and have a 6:1 bias toward option A. They respond to it more strongly if you phrase it as “a c b” and are twice as likely to share your view if you phrase it that way. The bias is even stronger amongst women & voters under 50, where they prefer option A by a factor of 9:1.”
Couple that ability to flagrantly violate their own editorial guidelines with…
- knowing user interests (and many other pieces of vital information)
- search personalization
- ad retargeting
- quality-based ad pricing / selective price gouging
- arbitrary editorial discrimination
- active investments in various content channels
- let us scrape your reviews or you die bundling
- offering online safety tips & labeling anything Google can’t get away with doing as something like malware in the search results (or spam in the editorial guidelines)
- political donations
- the ability to define or redefine any word or phrase as convenient & selective enforcement of defusing Google Bombing
- the “I know what you searched for last night” factor
- enhanced search yield from pushing desirable illegal ads & using that increased income to help buy marketshare to further reinforce network effects
- relevancy algorithms that can overweight content sources that Google profits from (eg: YouTube + ebooks) to create additional economic yield from search
… & Google is in an amazing position politically.
It is thus not surprising to see how politicians have a hard time being anything but pro-Google, as they are the new Western Union.
This isn’t the first time Google experimented with cloaking either. Threadwatch had a post on Google cloaking their help files years ago & YouTube offers users a screw you screen if they are in a country where the content isn’t licensed – yet they still show those cloaked pages ranking in the search results.
“The most perfidious way of harming a cause consists of defending it deliberately with faulty arguments.” ― Friedrich Nietzsche
It is common knowledge that you shouldn’t mix business and politics, however if one looks at history, many of those who gave us those sage words did precisely the opposite – and often illegally so – selling us down the river.
What is so obnoxious about Google’s survey trial is that a big site that was hit by Panda was hit because they used scroll cloaking & didn’t let the users get to the content right away. Googlers suggested users didn’t like it & voted against it, and then roll out the same sort of “wait 1 moment please” stuff themselves as a custom beta ad unit.
And today Google just announced that they might create an algorithm which looks at ad placements on a website as a spam signal outside of Panda:
“If you have ads obscuring your content, you might want to think about it,” asking publishers to consider, “Do they see content or something else that’s distracting or annoying?”
On the one hand they tell you to optimize your ad placements & on the other they tell you that those were not optimal & are so aggressive that they are spam.
For a while there was a period of time where you could use something like “would Google do this” as a rule of thumb for gray area behavior.
In the current market that won’t work.

“No man has the right to dictate what other men should perceive, create or produce, but all should be encouraged to reveal themselves, their perceptions and emotions, and to build confidence in the creative spirit.” ― Ansel Adams
As ad units get more interactive & Google keeps eating more verticals the line between spam vs not will keep blurring.
Perception is everything.
“We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.” ― Oscar Wilde
Online Halloween costume tutorials aplenty
Last Updated on Sunday, 30 October 2011 10:24 Written by External Post Sunday, 30 October 2011 10:24
(Credit: YouTube/KlairedelysArt) Those of you who are shunning sexy Halloween costumes this year for something more creative can get a little help from the YouTube community. YouTube has been a popular place for the do-it-yourself crowd to exchange
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Google Broadens Bug Bounties To Include Web App Security
Last Updated on Tuesday, 2 November 2010 02:20 Written by External Post Tuesday, 2 November 2010 02:20
n0-0p writes “Google just announced they will pay between $500 and $3133.70 for security bugs found in any of their web services, such as Search, YouTube, and Gmail. This appears to be an expansion of the program they already had in place for Chrome
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Google’s Real Problem – GTD?
Last Updated on Monday, 1 November 2010 07:41 Written by External Post Monday, 1 November 2010 07:41
In past week or so, Google has lost some high profile executives, including AdMob co-founder Omar Hamoui and YouTube CEO Chad Hurley. Google Maps/Google Wave co-creator Lars Rasmussen also quit and is joining Facebook, lamenting inability to get anything
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Will Google TV’s Move to YouTube Make a Difference With Content?
Last Updated on Thursday, 28 October 2010 11:42 Written by External Post Thursday, 28 October 2010 11:42
Extract not available.
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Google releases standalone YouTube app for Froyo
Last Updated on Friday, 22 October 2010 02:21 Written by External Post Friday, 22 October 2010 02:21
A new look for an old favorite. (Credit: Google) For the second time in as many months, Google has split one of its applications off from the Android platform. Following last September’s updated Gmail client, Google has released YouTube as a standalone
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YouTube Leanback launches on Google TV
Last Updated on Tuesday, 19 October 2010 08:02 Written by External Post Tuesday, 19 October 2010 08:02
A view of YouTube Leanback. (Credit: YouTube) YouTube’s made-for-television viewing experience has fittingly found its way to Google TV. YouTube Leanback, which was , will be available on all Google TV products starting this week. The launch of Leanback,
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YouTube Instant developer lands at Google
Last Updated on Saturday, 25 September 2010 11:20 Written by External Post Saturday, 25 September 2010 11:20
YouTube Instant and now YouTube Time Machine are examples of creative ways people are improving YouTube on their own. Last Month, Stanford computer science student Feross Aboukhadijeh saw the Google (GOOG) Instant presentation and knew he could do the
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Google whacks Spanish TV station in court
Last Updated on Thursday, 23 September 2010 06:01 Written by External Post Thursday, 23 September 2010 06:01
A Madrid court has thrown out copyright infringement charges brought against YouTube by Spanish TV station Telecinco. The station, owned by Silvio Berlusconi, won a previous case against Google’s video service in 2008. The court today dismissed charges
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