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Webmaster Articles
The nofollow tag
nofollow is an HTML attribute value used to instruct some search
engines that a hyperlink should not influence the link target's ranking in
the search engine's index. It is intended to reduce the effectiveness of
certain types of search engine spam, thereby improving the quality of
search engine results and preventing spamdexing from occurring.
The nofollow attribute value is not meant for blocking
access to content, or for preventing content to be indexed by search
engines. The proper methods for blocking search engine spiders to access
content on a website or for preventing them to include the content of a
page in their index are the Robots Exclusion Standard (robots.txt) for
blocking access and on-page Meta Elements that are designed to specify on
an individual page level what a search engine spider should or should not
do with the content of the crawled page.
It is important for the webmaster to be aware that the
nofollow tag is used on so many sites that one might be utilizing to
promote their sites. For instance you might think the new twitter craze
worth your while in promoting your site, but other than the traffic you
gain from twitter itself you more than likely will not receive any page
rank for your trouble. Just view the page source and look at the code on
this twitter page -
http://twitter.com/tvcrazy . Every link is riddled with the nofollow
tag. Perhaps ones best bet is to
find websites made by hand to trade links with. Of course you need to find
sites whose content is relevant to your own.
Books on Seo Concept and
specification
The concept for the specification of the attribute value nofollow was
designed by Google’s head of webspam team Matt Cutts and Jason Shellen
from Blogger.com in 2005.
The nofollow HTML attribute was originally designed to stop comment spam
on blogs. Blog readers and bloggers were well aware of the immense
problem. Just like any other type of spam affects its community, comment
spam affected the entire blogging community, so in early 2005 Google’s
Matt Cutts and Blogger’s Jason Shellen designed the attribute to address
the problem and the nofollow attribute was born.
The specification for nofollow is copyrighted 2005-2007 by the authors and
subject to a royalty free patent policy, e.g. per the W3C Patent Policy
20040205, and IETF RFC 3667 & RFC 3668. The authors intend to submit this
specification to a standards body with a liberal copyright/licensing
policy such as the GMPG, IETF, and/or W3C.
Example
<a href="http://www.example.com/" rel="nofollow">discount drugs</a>
Introduction and support
Google announced in early 2005 that hyperlinks with rel="nofollow"
attribute[4] would not influence the link target's PageRank. In addition,
the Yahoo and Bing search engines also respect this attribute.[5][6]
How the attribute is being interpreted differs between the search engines.
While some take it literally and do not follow the link to the page being
linked to[citation needed], others still "follow" the link to find new web
pages for indexing. In the latter case rel="nofollow" actually tells a
search engine "Don't score this link" rather than "Don't follow this
link." This differs from the meaning of nofollow as used within a robots
meta tag, which does tell a search engine: "Do not follow any of the
hyperlinks in the body of this document.".
Interpretation by the individual search engines
While all engines that support the attribute exclude links that use the
attribute from their ranking calculation, the details about the exact
interpretation of the attribute vary from search engine to search engine.
* Google states that their engine takes "nofollow" literally and does not
"follow" the link at all. However, experiments conducted by SEOs show
conflicting results. These studies reveal that Google does follow the
link, but does not index the linked-to page, unless it was in Google's
index already for other reasons (such as other, non-nofollow links that
point to the page).
* Yahoo! "follows it", but excludes it from their ranking calculation.
* Bing respects "nofollow" as regards not counting the link in their
ranking, but it is not proven whether or not Bing follows the link.
* Ask.com ignores the attribute altogether.
| rel="nofollow" Action |
Google |
Yahoo! |
Bing |
Ask.com |
| Follows the link |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
| Indexes the "linked to" page |
No |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
| Shows the existence of the link |
Only for a previously indexed page |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
| In SERPs for anchor text |
Only for a previously indexed page |
Yes |
Only for a previously indexed page |
Yes |
Use by weblog software
Most weblog software marks reader-submitted links this way by default
(with no option to disable it without code modification). A more
sophisticated server software could spare the nofollow for links submitted
by trusted users like those registered for a long time, on a whitelist, or
with a high good karma. Some server software adds rel="nofollow" to pages
that have been recently edited but omits it from stable pages, under the
theory that stable pages will have had offending links removed by human
editors.
The widely used blogging platform WordPress versions
1.5 and above automatically assign the nofollow attribute to all
user-submitted links (comment data, commenter URI, etc). However, there
are several free plugins available that automatically remove the nofollow
attribute value. Use on other
websites
MediaWiki software, which powers Wikipedia, was equipped with nofollow
support soon after initial announcement in 2005. The option was enabled on
most Wikipedias. One of the prominent exceptions was the English Wikipedia.
Initially, after a discussion, it was decided not to use rel="nofollow" in
articles and to use a URL blacklist instead. In this way, English
Wikipedia contributed to the scores of the pages it linked to, and
expected editors to link to relevant pages.
In May 2006, a patch to MediaWiki software allowed to enable nofollow
selectively in namespaces. This functionality was used on pages that are
not considered to be part of the actual encyclopedia, such as discussion
pages and resources for editors. Following increasing spam problems and a
within-Foundation order from Jimmy Wales, rel="nofollow" was added to
article-space links in January 2007.[13][14] However, the various
interwiki templates and shortcuts that link to other Wikimedia Foundation
projects and many external wikis such as Wikia are not affected by this
policy.
Other websites like Slashdot, with high user participation, use improvised
nofollow implementations like adding rel="nofollow" only for potentially
misbehaving users. Potential spammers posing as users can be determined
through various heuristics like age of registered account and other
factors. Slashdot also uses the poster's karma as a determinant in
attaching a nofollow tag to user submitted links.
Social bookmarking and photo sharing websites that use the rel="nofollow"
tag for their outgoing links include YouTube and Digg.com (for most
links); websites that don't use the rel="nofollow" tag include
Propeller.com (formerly Netscape.com), Yahoo! My Web 2.0, Twitter, and
Technorati Favs.
Paid links
Search engines have attempted to repurpose the nofollow attribute for
something different. Google began suggesting the use of nofollow also as a
machine-readable disclosure for paid links, so that these links do not get
credit in search engines' results.
The growth of the link buying economy, where companies' entire business
models are based on paid links that affect search engine rankings, caused
the debate about the use of nofollow in combination with paid links to
move into the center of attention of the search engines, who started to
take active steps against link buyers and sellers. This triggered a very
strong response from web masters.
Control internal PageRank flow
Search engine optimization professionals started using the nofollow
attribute to control the flow of PageRank within a website. This practice
is known as PageRank sculpting. This is an entirely different use than it
was intended originally. Nofollow was designed to control the flow of
PageRank from one website to another. However, some SEOs have suggested
that a nofollow used for an internal link should work just like nofollow
used for external links.
Several SEOs have suggested that pages such as "About Us", "Terms of
Service", "Contact Us", and "Privacy Policy" pages are not important
enough to earn PageRank, and so should have nofollow on internal links
pointing to them. Google employee Matt Cutts has provided indirect
responses on the subject, but has never publicly endorsed this point of
view.
The practice is controversial and has been challenged by some SEO
professionals, including Shari Thurow and Adam Audette. Site search
proponents have pointed out that visitors do search for these types of
pages, so using nofollow on internal links pointing to them may make it
difficult or impossible for visitors to find these pages in site searches
powered by major search engines.
Although proponents of use of nofollow on internal links have cited an
inappropriate attribution to Matt Cutts as support for using the
technique, Cutts himself never actually endorsed the idea. Several Google
employees (including Matt Cutts) have urged Webmasters not to focus on
manipulating internal PageRank. Google employee Adam Lasnik has advised
webmasters that there are better ways (e.g. click hierarchy) than nofollow
to "sculpt a bit of PageRank", but that it is available and "we're not
going to frown upon it".
No reliable data has been published on the effectiveness or potential harm
that use of nofollow on internal links may provide. Unsubstantiated claims
have been challenged throughout the debate and some early proponents of
the idea have subsequently cautioned people not to view the use of
nofollow on internal links as a silver bullet or quick-success solution.
More general consensus seems to favor the use of nofollow on internal
links pointing to user-controlled pages which may be subjected to spam
link practices, including user profile pages, user comments, forum
signatures and posts, calendar entries, etc.
YouTube, a Google company, uses nofollow on a number of internal 'help'
and 'share' links. |