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Viewing 15 posts - 61 through 75 (of 139 total)
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  • #697694
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I doubt that’s a count, thats just a couple that have been openly discussed at CAP.

    #697695
    Anonymous
    Inactive
    Bonusgeek wrote:
    xxhttp://1751.ffbk0w.info/

    This one – can you tell me how you found it?

    Under what keyword?

    Here too, you can switch the numbers in the URL and this time you get all kinds of things, pharmacy, whatnot.

    I am sure google would be very interested in this one, But I need a google search that brings it up.

    #697696
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Not an easy task for sure. I will have to reconfirm the scrapers posted on that thread are no longer scraping. If they are 888.com should deal with them as per their “new approach”.

    Believe me I don’t like the thought of going back into that thread. Back to the 14 hour days as my sites drops. It is the price I am willing to pay. Shelley is back and finally 888 is listening with a postive attitude. greek39

    #697697
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    wow I typed that one into google and found this. Scroll down past the frst entry, its a spammed blog and it likely has all this guys sites, there are a ton of them.

    xhttp://blogs.dion.ne.jp/rsblog/archives/3231368.html

    #697699
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Follow the pharmacy mostly viagra. greek39

    #697702
    Anonymous
    Inactive
    Dominique wrote:
    This one – can you tell me how you found it?

    Under what keyword?

    Here too, you can switch the numbers in the URL and this time you get all kinds of things, pharmacy, whatnot.

    I am sure google would be very interested in this one, But I need a google search that brings it up.

    Sorry Dom, I have no idea when or what search term I used to find that one. I know it is something like “bonusgeek no deposit” or “bonusgeek playtech casinos”, ect… But there are just too many to sift through to find it again. Here is one that I think is the same player if that helps and the google query below it.

    xx4712.cw3nsb.info/

    xxhttp://www.google.com/search?q=bonusgeek+no+deposit&hl=en&lr=&rls=GGLG,GGLG:2006-11,GGLG:en&start=70&sa=N&filter=0

    #697731
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Thanks. I will get around to reportng that today.

    I have found the reporting to work very well, everything disappears within a week or two.

    #697940
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    888, locating this is so simple you really should be doing this yourself. I am sure you have someone over there capable of bringng up google and typing 888 casino in the searchbox once a day. Maybe even 888.com or some other proprietary term. I really don’t want to be your nanny here. I don’t have the time and I am not paid to be your nanny.

    You should at least keep your own backyard clean. I’ll tell you when the trash spills into mine.

    http://www.google.com/search?q=888%20casino&hl=en

    What’s wrong with this picture?

    Try ths group:

    888 CASINO – Play For Real Money And Get Extra Cash888 casino – find where are the best prizes and bonuses. Play casino games online and win tons of cash!
    1997.jammatown.com/08/ – 8k – Cached – Similar pages – Note this

    888 CASINO – Online Casino Games For You!888 casino – use the right online casino bonuses to get the best online casino extra money! Play the best online casino games now!
    888-casino.jammatown.com/06/ – 8k – Cached – Similar pages – Note this

    888 CASINO – Play For Cash At Online Casino Now!888 casino – Find out what makes online casino games one of the most wanted and hottest topics on the Web!
    1839.jammatown.com/ – 8k – Cached – Similar pages – Note this

    There are a lot more.

    I’d hate to report them to google because they must be getting pretty sick of cleaning up after 888.com.

    #697942
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    888, locating this is so simple you really should be doing this yourself. I am sure you have someone over there capable of bringng up google and typing 888 casino in the searchbox once a day. Maybe even 888.com or some other proprietary term. I really don’t want to be your nanny here. I don’t have the time and I am not paid to be your nanny.

    That´s true 888. Maybe you should get the “Google Hacks” book and have your geeks write a few perl scripts. Then you push enter once or twice a day and can come up with a few nice lists that´ll enable you to be proactive rather than having the affiliates spoon feed you the information.

    #697943
    Anonymous
    Inactive
    Dominique wrote:
    888, locating this is so simple you really should be doing this yourself. I am sure you have someone over there capable of bringng up google and typing 888 casino in the searchbox once a day. Maybe even 888.com or some other proprietary term. I really don’t want to be your nanny here. I don’t have the time and I am not paid to be your nanny.

    You should at least keep your own backyard clean. I’ll tell you when the trash spills into mine.

    http://www.google.com/search?q=888%20casino&hl=en

    What’s wrong with this picture?

    Try ths group:

    888 CASINO – Play For Real Money And Get Extra Cash888 casino – find where are the best prizes and bonuses. Play casino games online and win tons of cash!
    1997.jammatown.com/08/ – 8k – Cached – Similar pages – Note this

    888 CASINO – Online Casino Games For You!888 casino – use the right online casino bonuses to get the best online casino extra money! Play the best online casino games now!
    888-casino.jammatown.com/06/ – 8k – Cached – Similar pages – Note this

    888 CASINO – Play For Cash At Online Casino Now!888 casino – Find out what makes online casino games one of the most wanted and hottest topics on the Web!
    1839.jammatown.com/ – 8k – Cached – Similar pages – Note this

    There are a lot more.

    I’d hate to report them to google because they must be getting pretty sick of cleaning up after 888.com. I found this fairly interesting.

    Jammatown to my untrained, unexpert eye looks clean enough. The text looks handwritten and unique. No spammed backlinks. No redirect via scraed content. Jiust a load of jammatown subdomains that are likely up there via the stop press algo.

    (I could be wrong on all the above, I am no expert)

    888 need to pull their finger out and do this properly or the cynicism remains.

    #697947
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I must of missed something. False or misleading title or description tags that redirect is a deceptive practice. Google will not tolerate having neophites get deceptive results. Just a matter of common sense, most are spam results.

    No offence but perl scripting will not give desired results. I would imagine Dominique has spent a enormous about of time on this, so have I.

    I am taking this growing problem right down to the seed in a attempt to shut off the water. greek39

    #697948
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    It’s spamdexing.

    Spamdexing
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Jump to: navigation, search
    Spamdexing or search engine spamming is the practice of deliberately creating web pages which will be indexed by search engines in order to increase the chance of a website or page being placed close to the beginning of search engine results, or to influence the category to which the page is assigned. Many designers of web pages try to get a good ranking in search engines and design their pages accordingly. The word is a portmanteau of spamming and indexing.

    Spamdexing refers exclusively to practices that are dishonest and mislead search and indexing programs to give a page a ranking it does not deserve. “White hat” techniques for making a website indexable by search engines, without misleading the indexing process, are known as search engine optimization (SEO). SEO techniques do not involve deceit.

    Search engine spammers, on the contrary, are generally aware that the content that they promote is not very useful or relevant to the ordinary internet surfer. Search engines use a variety of algorithms to determine relevancy ranking. Some of these include determining whether the search term appears in the META keywords tag, others whether the search term appears in the body text of a web page. A variety of techniques are used to spamdex (see below). Many search engines check for instances of spamdexing and will remove suspect pages from their indexes.

    The rise of spamdexing in the mid-1990s made the leading search engines of the time less useful, and the success of Google at both producing better search results and combating keyword spamming, through its reputation-based PageRank link analysis system, helped it become the dominant search site late in the decade, where it remains. While it has not been rendered useless by spamdexing, Google has not been immune to more sophisticated methods either. Google bombing is another form of web vandalism, which involves creating pages that directly affect the rank of other sites[1].

    Spamdexers may act as consultants, to help other web publishers drive up their sites’ ranks using black-hat techniques. Alternatively, they may set up sites of their own that benefit from misleadingly-high rankings — for instance, creating thousands or millions of landing pages containing links for which the spammer earns a commission whenever the user clicks.

    Common spamdexing techniques can be classified into two broad classes: content spam and link spam.

    Contents [hide]
    1 Content spam
    2 Link spam
    3 Other types of spamdexing
    4 See also
    5 External links
    5.1 To report Spamdexed pages
    5.2 Search engine help pages for Webmasters
    5.3 Other tools and information for Webmasters
    5.4 Worst of the web

    [edit]
    Content spam
    These techniques involve altering the logical view that a search engine has over the page’s contents. They all aim at variants of the vector space model for information retrieval on text collections.

    Hidden or invisible text
    Disguising keywords and phrases by making them the same (or almost the same) color as the background, using a tiny font size or hiding them within the HTML code such as “no frame” sections, ALT attributes and “no script” sections. This is useful to make a page appear to be relevant for a web crawler in a way that makes it more likely to be found. Example: A promoter of a Ponzi scheme wants to attract web surfers to a site where he advertises his scam. He places hidden text appropriate for a fan page of a popular music group on his page, hoping that the page will be listed as a fan site and receive many visits from music lovers.
    Keyword stuffing
    This involves the insertion of hidden, random text on a webpage to raise the keyword density or ratio of keywords to other words on the page. Older versions of indexing programs simply counted how often a keyword appeared, and used that to determine relevance levels. Most modern search engines have the ability to analyze a page for keyword stuffing and determine whether the frequency is above a “normal” level.
    Meta tag stuffing
    Repeating keywords in the Meta tags, and using keywords that are unrelated to the site’s content.
    Gateway or doorway pages
    Creating low-quality web pages that contain very little content but are instead stuffed with very similar key words and phrases. They are designed to rank highly within the search results. A doorway page will generally have “click here to enter” in the middle of it.
    Scraper sites
    Scraper sites, also known as Made for AdSense sites, are created using various programs designed to ‘scrape’ search engine results pages or other sources of content (including Wikipedia) and create ‘content’ for a website. These types of websites are generally full of advertising, or redirect the user to other sites.
    [edit]
    Link spam
    Link spam takes advantage of link-based ranking algorithms, such as Google’s PageRank algorithm, which gives a higher ranking to a website the more other highly-ranked websites link to it. These techniques also aim at influencing other link-based ranking techniques such as the HITS algorithm.

    Link farms
    Involves creating tightly-knit communities of pages referencing each other, also known humorously as mutual admiration societies [2]
    Hidden links
    Putting links where visitors will not see them in order to increase link popularity.
    Sybil attack
    This is the forging of multiple identities for malicious intent, named after the famous schizophrenia patient Shirley Ardell Mason. A spammer may create multiple web sites at different domain names that all link to each other, such as fake blogs known as spam blogs.
    Spam in blogs
    This is the placing or solicitation of links randomly on other sites, placing a desired keyword into the hyperlinked text of the inbound link. Guest books, forums, blogs and any site that accepts visitors comments are particular targets and are often victims of drive by spamming where automated software creates nonsense posts with links that are usually irrelevant and unwanted. See the Comment spam number mystery for a real world example.
    Spam blogs (also known as splogs)
    A spam blog, on the contrary, is a fake blog created exclusively with the intent of spamming. They are similar in nature to link farms.
    Page hijacking
    Referer log spamming
    When someone accesses a web page, i.e. the referee, by following a link from another web page, i.e. the referer, the referee is given the address of the referer by the person’s internet browser. Some websites have a referer log which shows which pages link to that site. By having a robot randomly access many sites enough times, with a message or specific address given as the referer, that message or internet address then appears in the referer log of those sites that have referer logs. Since some search engines base the importance of sites by the number of different sites linking to them, referer-log spam may be used to increase the search engine rankings of the spammer’s sites, by getting the referer logs of many sites to link to them.
    Buying expired domains
    Some link spammers monitor DNS records for domains that will expire soon, then buy them when they expire and replace the pages with links to their pages.
    Some of these techniques may be applied for creating a Google bomb, this is, to cooperate with other users to boost the ranking of a particular page for a particular query.

    [edit]
    Other types of spamdexing
    Mirror websites
    Hosting of multiple websites all with the same content but using different URLs. Some search engines give a higher rank to results where the keyword searched for appears in the URL.
    URL redirections
    Taking the user to another page without his or her intervention, e.g. using META refresh tags, CGI scripts, Java, JavaScript, Server side redirects or server side techniques.
    Cloaking refers to any of several means to serve up a different page to the search-engine spider than will be seen by human users. It can be an attempt to mislead search engines regarding the content on a particular web site. It should be noted, however, that cloaking can also be used to ethically increase accessibility of a site to users with disabilities, or to provide human users with content that search engines aren’t able to process or parse. It is also used to deliver content based on a user’s location; Google themselves use IP delivery, a form of cloaking, to deliver results.
    A form of this is ‘code swapping, this is: optimizing a page for top ranking, then swapping another page in its place once a top ranking is achieved.

    The following techniques are also widely acknowledged as being spam, or “black hat”:

    Doorway pages
    Link farms
    Googleating

    You can follow links and learn more here:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spamdexing

    #697951
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    This is fact Dominique! spam results they are.

    #698052
    Anonymous
    Inactive
    greek39 wrote:
    A partial email sent, more questions before I proceed any further. Perhaps Bonusgeek run threw http://www.casinoaffiliateprograms.com/bb/showthread.php?t=10490 and see how mant accounts have been closed. greek39

    Have not received a reply yet, looking to move forward. greek39

    #698273
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    After reading up on spamdexing I am still baffled in this instance.

    url Jammatown actually has content, description etc based upon the content. Advertises 888 & Partypoker.

    I have to defer to you guys greater knowledge. Spam it is.

    I don’t need to defer the opinion that 888 need to define what is acceptable and crack down on unnaceptable, allied with ongoing review of what is and is not acceptable, allied with ongoing pulling of the unacceptable.

    Or they are not serious because whatever they do to the affs who sent players via the nefarious, 888 still have the players signed up, but pay nothing to the blackhatter.

    I am fast getting the impression we are being mugged off.

Viewing 15 posts - 61 through 75 (of 139 total)