The other
day, an
article appeared in
Search Engine Journal
suggesting webmasters
monetize their sites
using Google AdSense.
While the article
neglected to mention an
alternative webmaster
advertising program
offered by Yahoo Search
Marketing, the idea of
using one's website as a
commercial medium (if
possible or practical)
makes good sense and can
provide a minor
side-income. Such minor
side-incomes are often
the first ingredients in
making the gravy craved
by all small business
owners.
Since the
advent of Google's
AdWords grassroots
distribution program,
AdSense, several
webmasters have built
businesses out of taking
content off of other
people's websites and
using that content to
build pages designed
specifically to attract
ad-clicks. As the
average commission
earned by sites running
AdSense generated
advertising is
approximately $20/month,
webmasters working this
type of scheme need to
create hundreds, if not
thousands of pages to
make a living. In order
to create those pages
and attract ad-clicking
visitors, content must
be created, begged,
borrowed, or most
commonly, simply stolen.
Known as
Splogs , these sites
only exist to game
Google in one way or
another, mostly for
money but also for
increased search
rankings or as a means
of manipulating search
spiders.
Splogs
most often get their
content by scraping, the
process of sending an
electronic copying bot
to take everything it
sees, recreating it on
an unlimited number of
instant documents. By
running advertising
generated through the
AdSense program, the
owners of the splogs
make money when visitors
click on the ads. In
other words, literally
millions of instant
sites have sprung up
over the past twelve
months, most of which
are free-hosted Blogs,
containing content
scraped out from the
original sites.
Before
continuing, I would like
to make it clear that
there are several
publications that
request permission to
reprint content. That's
ok. Chances are, this
article is being read in
one of those
publications. Online
business runs on such
agreements.
Splogs
are bad business and the
practice is finally
getting the notice it
deserves. Several search
heavyweights have
weighed in on Splogs
over the past two weeks
and a flame-war (the
virtual equivalent of
fisticuffs) broke out
between members of two
well-known SEO/SEM
forums. As a result, the
practice of producing
AdSense revenues from
stolen content on spammy
sites got a little bit
harder, starting today.
Matt
Cutts
,
Google's
spam fighter and quality
assurance czar , has
taken an obvious and
positive interest in
Splogs. In the SEO/SEM
community, Cutts' name
is as widely known as
Page, Brin, and even
Gates' names are. Cutts
is "the man" when it
comes to explaining the
state of Google's
various indexes and how
they work. He is
referred to as the Chief
Spam Fighter at Google.
In a posting to his
Gadgets, Google, and SEO
blog earlier today,
Cutts invites Google
users to report Splogs
displaying AdSense
driven advertising.
"You
see a low-quality site
that is running AdSense
If you run across a site
that you consider spammy
and it has AdSense on
it, click on the "Ads by
Goooooogle" link and
click "Send Google your
thoughts on the ads you
just saw". Enter the
words spamreport
and
jagger1 in the
comments field."
The name,
"Jagger1" is the
reference name given the
Google algorithm update
that is currently
causing the present
shuffling of Google's
search results. (Please
see today's Major
Players section for more
information on the
Jagger Update.)
Splog
fraud is a big problem
for Google and a growing
concern for the other
major search advertising
providers such as Yahoo
Search Marketing, and
MSN. It is also a
problem for others
working on the Internet.
The way content is taken
from one site and
replicated to dozens of
others can cause no end
to technical and
financial issues for
honest webmasters.
Content, incidentally,
is not always limited to
what the viewer sees on
the screen. Stolen
content often includes
source-code and as
anyone familiar with
code can tell you,
there's a lot of domain
and document specific
information embedded in
source-code.
Over at
Search Engine Journal
, a funny posting
shows how one poorly
executed scrape made an
honest webmaster afraid
of being branded a
click-fraud artist by
Google. After scraping
the site, the
splog-artist apparently
forgot to remove the
AdSense code from the
stolen content. That's
how the honest webmaster
found out he had been
stolen from. He was
moved to contact Google
before his AdSense
account status was
affected. If the
webmaster hadn't been
paying attention, he
might have been badly
branded by Google,
burned by someone else's
scam.
That's
not the only way that
scrappers could
adversely affect honest
webmasters however. The
content webmasters
create, or have created
for them, is the
attraction that prompts
visitors to their sites.
Attracting lots of site
visitors is a pretty
important step to making
money from AdSense or
the Yahoo Publishing
Network. If someone is
stealing that content,
they are also stealing
potential visitors. For
the webmaster, that
content represents
investment. For the
content creator, it
represents product.
Either way, the scraping
of content is theft.
The
stolen product is then
used to create what is
essentially duplicate
content on another site.
Duplication of content
can have an adverse
effect on the search
engine placement of all
documents containing the
similar items. Imagine
losing your placements
because someone else
took the material you
laboured over.
Fortunately, Google's
historic record of
documents is fairly good
at weeding through which
source first displayed
specific content.
Search
engines have several
other reasons to be
concerned about splogs.
As many of them are
created using the free-blog
software offered and
hosted by most of the
major search engines,
the proliferation of so
many splogs consumes a
lot of resources. They
also gum up search
results with sites not
actually relevant to
search engine users.
Lastly, they devalue the
legitimate uses of blogs
as communications and
marketing tools, which
might lead future blog
readers or users away
from the growing
blogosphere. Citizen's
publishing is seen as a
major revenue source for
both Google and Yahoo.
Having invested so much
time, energy and money
into the establishment
of blogs, the major
search engines would be
loath to let their
investments go the way
of the dodos without a
fight.
Now that
the web development
community is talking
about the issue in
earnest, some forms of
protections might
evolve. As it stands
currently, there is
little a webmaster can
do to protect his or her
content from being
stolen for profit. You
can use
Copyscape to see if
your material has been
nabbed but after doing
that, there is little
one can do except write
angry letters to the
thief and a lawyer.
Google is
inviting users and
webmasters to report
splogs running AdSense
whenever they are seen.
In a just universe, not
only would the AdSense
accounts of those
scrappers be closed,
their bank accounts
would be emptied after
Google sues them for
fraud.