Pappa Paul Strikes Out at GOOGLE - Thank You Paul

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  1. HSanAlim profile image59
    HSanAlimposted 12 years ago

    If you have not yet read the article Paul Edmonson, founder of our platform, HubPages, has posted on techcrunch.com you should go there and read it RIGHT NOW.

    http://techcrunch.com/2011/05/05/google … mpetition/

    First of all - THANK YOU Paul for so eloquently expressing what more than a few of us had noticed and been agonizing over.  To some of us the giant difference in treatment between YouTube - a Google owned open platform - and the way other legitimate open publishing platforms, like Hubpages are treated, Post Panda is sickening, disheartening and possible an illegal action. Stifling competition in the United States is clearly illegal.

    Secondly - If the U.S. Congress feels anti trust regulations are broken in the college football championship formula (algorithm) because some college football conferences are treated differently in the participation formula than others, why should not the U.S. Congress look into Google's variation of treatment of open publishing platforms.

    Panda is killing tens of thousands of small content producers that want and intend to produce top quality content for the internet. It's hard to follow Google's line of thought even and equally when some of us have to wear blindfolds while others, like YouTube contributors have the benefit of inside YouTube information on just what quality content is.

    Thirdly - Again - Sincerely Mr. Edmonson - Thank you, Thank you, Thank you

    1. jponiato profile image89
      jponiatoposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      I'm not happy with the effect of Panda on readership here and on other platforms where I've published, but I can't agree with the idea that Google's algorithm changes are illegal.  Unfair?  Yes.  But I think we tend to over-legislate business any time a group of people is unhappy with the actions of a commercial entity.  I'm not talking about pollution controls or fair labor acts, but about technology and competition.

    2. profile image0
      shazwellynposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      I am happy and grateful that you posted this wonderful link.  Thank you.

  2. lrohner profile image67
    lrohnerposted 12 years ago

    Um....just what is it you were "agonizing" over?

    Frankly, I could care less how YouTube or any other site fared through all of this. It has nothing to do with me.

    And whining in public about how unfair life is just isn't very attractive, IMHO.

    1. HSanAlim profile image59
      HSanAlimposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Whining - sorry if you took it that way.

      Google giving preference to it's own open publishing web property over any other open publishing platform, if indeed this is happening, is illegal in the United States.  It's a matter of legality and not a matter of whining that life is not fair.

      But thanks for your opinion and please note that whether or not I agree with you. Please do take note that the open platform of this forum gave you an equal opportunity to express your views - your content - so to speak.

      1. lrohner profile image67
        lrohnerposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        I didn't mean that you were the one who was whining. smile

  3. Eric Graudins profile image60
    Eric Graudinsposted 12 years ago

    Dear HSanAlim.

    I admire your loyalty, but I believe that HubPages don't really know what the hell they're doing with all of these "quality improving" changes.

    And comparing hubpages with Youtube is meaningless.

    It would be far more meaningful to compare hubpages with www.howstuffworks.com which also published articles.

    Their traffic has INCREASED since the Panda changes.

    Anyway, this topic is being discussed on
    http://hubpages.com/forum/topic/74724

    1. Richieb799 profile image76
      Richieb799posted 12 years agoin reply to this

      I wouldn't say the comparison between Youtube and Hubpages is meaningless, they both distribute informative, entertaining and useful content to people but in different formats..and Youtube also has its share of trash videos that appear in search results

      1. lrohner profile image67
        lrohnerposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        There is a huge disparity between the two, Richie. For instance, HubPages has any number of competitors (other content farms, news sites, bloggers, etc.), while YouTube really doesn't have any to speak of. Big difference. Think about it -- if they took YouTube out of the results (and I'm not suggesting they consciously did this, btw), what then? There's nowhere else to go for what they offer.

        1. Richieb799 profile image76
          Richieb799posted 12 years agoin reply to this

          Youtube doesn't have any competitors, now you are being absurd.. they have the same if not more competitors..they have BlipTV, Metacafe, Buzznet, Flickr hosts video as well, Ebaums world, Motion Box..not to mention BlogTV which does live video

          That is only a few sites, there is a massive list on reelseo of 100

          If Youtube went down one of these would be ready to take over..have you ever used one of these sites? Buzznet is my favourite

          I am with our CEO Paul on this, I might even write a hub about it

          1. skyfire profile image80
            skyfireposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            How many sites that you mentioned are popular enough (household names) ? There is not a single site from your reply that can replace youtube. Just because you like buzznet doesn't mean it has enough PR to replace youtube. There are some commercial channels with revenue potential on youtube. Business/Artists/television shows are showing their premium content on youtube because of their popularity. Try fetching traffic like youtube to any other video site and you've winner to replace youtube. Comparing video site with content churning mill is a strawman at it's best.
            --------------------


            Just because there are forex videos or weight loss videos doesn't mean it is spam(that's HP's line of thinking not marketers or users). No wonder they banned clickbank domain on this site and still failed to prove their point that it's spam. Besides that, youtube is not HP property to weed out anything that has clickbank tag or forex/health tag. They see traffic to these categories and will keep it as long as they make money from it.

          2. lrohner profile image67
            lrohnerposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            That's kind of like saying that I'm a competitor to McDonalds simply because I make hamburgers every now and then. smile

            1. bgamall profile image67
              bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

              No, this is because Google owns Youtube.

              1. profile image0
                shazwellynposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                Has a monopoly on the market and deliberately clears 'competition' (by starving them of business) so as they remain no 1.  It is a demonstration of the blurred line between 'free market' and 'closed market'.

            2. Richieb799 profile image76
              Richieb799posted 12 years agoin reply to this

              What so these other video sites only churn out videos now and again? and are not major video sites?

              Sites like BlipTV and Buzznet have millions of users, and in regards to Skyfires's comment about them not being household names, Youtube only became a household name because they were the first to do it and then had large commercial backing which gave them the 'household' status

              If Youtube was not around another of these sites would gain popularity within the internet crowd first and then they too would gain commercial backing and the cycle continues, supply and demand.

              1. Mrvoodoo profile image59
                Mrvoodooposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                If Youtube was not around...'

                But it is.  Those other sites are sites that most net users stumble across occasionally.  Where as YouTube is where you head to, when you intentionally want to seek out videos.  A million or so users is peanuts.

                There are plenty of wannabe competitors, but there's no competition.

                1. Richieb799 profile image76
                  Richieb799posted 12 years agoin reply to this

                  Hi Mr Voodoo, I was saying that Google looking out for Youtube because they own them prevents these sites from gaining more popularity, in referral to the original question..
                  I wasn't saying they are anywhere near as popular as Youtube, I'm just saying that they have large fan bases and do everything and more as what Youtube does.
                  and I'd also like to add in regards to skyfire's comment again that they all have high PR's 7,8 and 9's

      2. Eric Graudins profile image60
        Eric Graudinsposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        1. You tube is a video sharing site. hub pages is a text based site.
        2. YouTube has 120 million visitors per day. HP has 1.5 million

        3. You tube is a household name around the world. Hubpages is not.

        4. Most people will get to you tube through people sharing links around, or by searching within you tube. This is not the case for Hubpages.

        Yes, you can argue that Hubpages is like You tube because both distribute content.
        I can equally argue that a skateboard is as good as a car to travel across the country. After all, they both have 4 wheels.

    2. tritrain profile image70
      tritrainposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      I think a better comparison would have been between Google's Knol and HubPages.

      HOWEVER, Knol was largely unsuccessful and is not a recognized name to the majority of people.   Then again, maybe this is how Google will raise that awareness, now that it has pushed down the competition.

  4. psycheskinner profile image83
    psycheskinnerposted 12 years ago

    The comparison is a complete straw man as there are dozens of other reasons why they would respond differently, and the graph was basically made up anyway--with no axis you could check.

    Panda slapped content farms. Love it or hate it, that was what it was all about.

  5. PaulGoodman67 profile image95
    PaulGoodman67posted 12 years ago

    I think it's a good article.  I previously wrote a hub in favour of the algo changes and one against to explore the arguments.  I personally think that Paul E's Youtube comparison is pertinent in this case.

    I think Google are pressurizing websites to improve the content across the entire site, as Paul E says.  Whilst the aim is noble, this effects the HP business model.  Previously they relied heavily on software and self-policing, now they need many more staff to monitor hubs, which costs a lot more.

    The big problem is, as Paul E says, in most industries you would have clear guidelines for behaviour, Google don't give you anything, however.  If it was a restaurant, there would be strict health and safety rules, but at least you can read exactly what the rules are and you might be given definitive lists of areas where you need to improve.

    Google, however, can effectively close a website down and give no reasons.  It behaves more like a god than a government.  That's the frightening thing.

    1. Barbara Kay profile image73
      Barbara Kayposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      This may be an extreme opinion, but I am not so sure that Google isn't trying to run content sites out of business.

  6. tritrain profile image70
    tritrainposted 12 years ago

    I hope posting on TechCrunch raises awareness of open platforms and how Google appears to be targeting certain sites, while favoring their own.


    I look forward to reading a response from Google and to Paul Edmondson's followup with us on it.

  7. Mark Ewbie profile image81
    Mark Ewbieposted 12 years ago

    It's a great post, but that's all it is. 

    Google set out to target content farms (maybe), HP got hammered as a result of the algorithm changes.

    Google don't tell people what the rules are because they don't want the searches gamed.

    Google don't care about the negative posts, complaints and so on - because for each of these there will be customers, people, businesses whose traffic has improved. 

    There is no sign of Google panicking and undoing the Panda change - so they must be happy with it.

    Let's hope the 'fix' for HP is just around the corner.  Fingers crossed.

    1. PaulGoodman67 profile image95
      PaulGoodman67posted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Well, I think that HP are doing their best to "fix" the probs, given what they know, which isn't a great deal, apparently! 

      Hopefully all the tidying up of the HP site and the new ad layout will eventually be acknowledged by Google (asap I hope!).

      I agree that Google have done what they intended.  If sites clean up their act and then Google give back search visibility as a reward, everyone will be happy

  8. PaulaHenry1 profile image66
    PaulaHenry1posted 12 years ago

    Wow- talk about biting the hand that feeds you....I personally think that HP is doing everything they can to try and make things better not only for us Hubbers but for themselves. Is what they are doing always the best solution, no. But by golly, give them the credit they deserve for at least trying!

    1. Mark Ewbie profile image81
      Mark Ewbieposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Not sure if you are talking to me or some other moaner - but I have some time free...

      HP don't feed me.  Leastways I can't live off 20c a day. I don't feed them either.

      My view, and it is only a view of course are simply some facts as I see them.  No point in pussying around, mixing messages.

      I appreciate HP are doing their best - of course they are.

      And finally - believe it or not - I love HP.  Great site, software, people and opportunity to get on and write stuff.  I love it to bits.

    2. SunSeven profile image61
      SunSevenposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Certainly the people who left are never ever fed by HP. And for those who stay, its mutual, they are fed by you.

    3. psycheskinner profile image83
      psycheskinnerposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      By biting the hand that feeds *them*?

      1. SunSeven profile image61
        SunSevenposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        Is she a new moderator in disguise, I see often in the forums, the main staff expressing their inability to recruit the right ones and blaming 'it' on the new recruits! for all the mischief and grief caused to the hubbers. smile

        1. psycheskinner profile image83
          psycheskinnerposted 12 years agoin reply to this

          "She" who? I'm confused. We all have different opinions here.  It's okay. smile

          1. PaulaHenry1 profile image66
            PaulaHenry1posted 12 years agoin reply to this

            1st, just an expression. Secondly, no I am not a moderator in disguise. Just a hubber like all of you throwing in my 2 cents.

  9. rebekahELLE profile image85
    rebekahELLEposted 12 years ago

    I noticed a prominent Google Chrome commercial last night highlighting Google's services online, including YouTube, as a form of communication. It's the Dear Sophie commercial which has gone viral.

    Their advertising dollars make a huge difference!

    HP's recovery will take time. I see a lot of discontent from writers here, but hey, I'm sure they're (CEO, Staff) experiencing some sleepless nights as well. I don't see that continual complaining is going to bring desirable results.

  10. SunSeven profile image61
    SunSevenposted 12 years ago

    Why dont HP ditch Google? And start optimizing the site for the rest of the search engines? I read somewhere that search traffic from Bing tend to click on ads more than visitors from G traffic does.

    1. prairieprincess profile image92
      prairieprincessposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      I wondered that too. Can you monetize with Bing?

  11. prettydarkhorse profile image62
    prettydarkhorseposted 12 years ago

    appease G with videos. I read from a data somewhere that ehow is the number one supplier of videos to youtube. Plus Gs income from youtube is one third of its total income by which it is projected to increase more in 2012, they don't want that to be compromised.

    I don't know if you can't compare HP and youtube just bec. the other is so popular, the fact is they both provide information and same algo should apply to both. Ideally, G should treat all sites equally - that is wishful thinking. G said that they are currently in the process of converting youtube videos to WebM format.

    1. bgamall profile image67
      bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      We do that.

  12. SunSeven profile image61
    SunSevenposted 12 years ago

    Ups and downs of life! smile

  13. bgamall profile image67
    bgamallposted 12 years ago

    Ok, this was on another thread but no one is reading. This is the deal, Google has no consistency anymore because it is a pure money grab. They lift youtube with crap content.

    They allow syndication everywhere. My BI articles are now being syndicated at www.sovereignindependent.com and our funny friend Borowitz openly pandas, er, I mean, panders for syndication: http://www.borowitzreport.com/syndicate/

    I am flattered my articles are syndicated, which is why Google should allow syndication from here to favored sites. Otherwise we are OUT of the game.

  14. thisisoli profile image70
    thisisoliposted 12 years ago

    The Panda update was an algorithmic update. No sites were given special treatment, despite what the consipracy theorists say.

    Why would youtube fare better than Hubpages? let me give you three out of many reasons,

    Backlinks
    Social media interaction
    They have not massively reduced their available content

    1. bgamall profile image67
      bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      That cannot be right if Youtube has many crap videos. You just aren't getting it. In fact, some 2.0 websites are being punished, as HP is social media.

      1. thisisoli profile image70
        thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        HP is not social media, social media would be the publicly available facebook data, the twitter feed, Google Buzz, and Google +1.

        1. bgamall profile image67
          bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

          Social media creates interactive dialogue. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media

          We are web 2.0: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2.0

          Web 2.0 was demoted in many instances and 1.0 was placed higher, like newspapers online, Oli.

          1. Peter Hoggan profile image68
            Peter Hogganposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            The reason newspaper sites outrank other sites has nothing to do with web 2.0 or 1.0. It comes down to QDF or query deserves freshness. QDF gives fresh, current content a chance to rank along with established well linked content.

            1. bgamall profile image67
              bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

              I don't quite get that because we were fresher with google news. Now it is gone. Seems like we are becoming less fresh. ??

              1. Peter Hoggan profile image68
                Peter Hogganposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                Sorry, I don't understand one word of that.

          2. thisisoli profile image70
            thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            A newspaper site has just as much interactivity as Hubpages.

            1. bgamall profile image67
              bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

              Well, in that case they have become more like 2.0. And Yahoo answers has killed a lot of other sites.

              1. thisisoli profile image70
                thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                You have to remember that Web 2.0 is just a name.  If you actually look at web interactivity, it has been around since the very beginning.  Web 2.0 was infact just a marketing tactic.

      2. thisisoli profile image70
        thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        And youtube having rubbish videos has nothing to do with

        Backlinks
        Social Media
        Mass removal of content

        I would suggest that you are not getting it since my day job is an SEO and IM consultant, so I am fully aware of defined boundaries on Internet terms.

        1. Richieb799 profile image76
          Richieb799posted 12 years agoin reply to this

          Deleted

          1. thisisoli profile image70
            thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            Getting videos highly placed on Youtube is irrelevant to Hubpages/Youtube. The fact of the matter is that they are two entirely different platforms.

            Youtube video optimization is a pertinant way to increase website traffic, simply because with effective use of video sitemaps and onpage optimization on your embed page.youtube page you can get a video hosted on youtube to get to the top of the video results which appear on the main Google results, but clicking on them will take you back to the page where you embedded the video.

            1. bgamall profile image67
              bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

              Then explain why my original content on Hubpages is now listed below the syndicated versions on BI? If you know so much I assume you must think the algorithm terminated originality claim. What do you think about that?

              That doesn't sound algorithmic to me, buddy.

              1. thisisoli profile image70
                thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                Because BI has a much larger social media presence and Hubpages doesn't, because Hubpages too a huge domain trust hit?

                1. bgamall profile image67
                  bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                  I will buy that Oli, but why does Google trust Youtube? Trust is fickle apparently and not based upon anything but who google wants to trust. That doesn't sound like an algorithm btw.

                  1. thisisoli profile image70
                    thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                    No, it is part of the algorithm,  Google, and other SE's tell us that they are rapidly increasing the data they glean from FB and Twitter, Google has told us they will be using +1 data, and we have also seen tests which show slight impacts with Google buzz.

                    By using the data of how people socially interact with a web address Google can extract a number to throw in to their formula.

                    Take a look at the social interation on You Tube. Look at how many people like each page, I generally see a mention of youtube on Twitter whenever I log on, and Youtube videos are placed on millions, if not billions of websites.

                    The extent of social interation on hubpages is basically self promotion and a little interaction from direct friends.

              2. thisisoli profile image70
                thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                Let me clarify this for you

                Backlinks

                BI has significantly more backlinks than hubpages, around 3 million more infact.

                Social Media - Guess how many mentions I gets on public facebook data, guess how many times each story gets retweeted across twitter.

                Now look at the social media traffic of Hubpages.  And before you pull some inane wikipedia reference also try and remember that this is an SEO conversation, so when we talk about social media we are talking about social media companents that have a tangable effect on the rankings of a website.

                Using social media as a marketing technique is a completely different matter, but right now we are talking about search engine rankings, we want to now how social media affects the results, and I have already answered that.

                When I am doing SM SEO strategy I couldn't give a flying about using some cloned article sharing website.

                And now lets look at overall content.  Hubpages is rapidly deleting content and losing backlinks, that simply doesnt look good.  It means less search engine visibility. It means we are dropping even further away from competitve sites.

                1. bgamall profile image67
                  bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                  Many of these sites have backlinks because they have an army of people willing to tweet articles to the top. So the only way that Hubpages could regain or gain this is to pay to be on high traffic sites, right? How else will that happen?

                  1. thisisoli profile image70
                    thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                    Most sitees don't need to pay, there are plenty of sites out there that generate organic social interaction, and there are plenty of ways to grow that by inducing interaction with your visitors.

                  2. thisisoli profile image70
                    thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                    Either that or stop deleting content that attracts high volumes of traffic for arbritrary reasons such as affiliate links and pixelated images.

  15. psycheskinner profile image83
    psycheskinnerposted 12 years ago

    indeed. Panda did what it said it did--downgrade content farms.  No more and no less.

    1. SunSeven profile image61
      SunSevenposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Why specifically HP, when other content farms are not effected/affected?

      BTW, Can we call youtube a content farm, albeit video?

      Best Regards

      1. bgamall profile image67
        bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        It is certainly a content farm. This is manipulated and I don't believe for a minute that it was an algorithm.

      2. Sally's Trove profile image78
        Sally's Troveposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        This brings up an important question...how is content evaluated by Google? Through algos run against text? Probably. How do you create a program to validate image data? Has anyone done that?

        For example, a YouTube vid might have nothing to do with its keywords or description. I could title a vid "A Skunk in the House", write a description about something stinky in the house, add key words such as skunk, house, animal, but the film is about lying and cheating going on in a relationship. Please tell me Google knows how to analyze digital imaging against text.

        In this sense, scents, YouTube is not subject to any kind of evaluation against content standards. If Google is singling out content farms, then it has a perfect loophole with YouTube, since YouTube's content can't be analyzed. Therefore, YouTube is not a content farm.

        Suddenly, I have a headache. sad

        1. bgamall profile image67
          bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

          Then it is a link farm.

          1. Sally's Trove profile image78
            Sally's Troveposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            And if it is a link farm, then what?

            1. bgamall profile image67
              bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

              Lol, I don't know!

  16. SunSeven profile image61
    SunSevenposted 12 years ago

    What happened to Google Videos?, I wonder. smile

  17. SunSeven profile image61
    SunSevenposted 12 years ago

    How do I find out what is Google Videos site's PR. Is it true that Google owns it too?

    Best Regards

    1. bgamall profile image67
      bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Google owns Youtube.

  18. SunSeven profile image61
    SunSevenposted 12 years ago

    I meant

    GOOGLEVIDEOS.COM


    Sorry. smile

  19. sunforged profile image68
    sunforgedposted 12 years ago

    of course Google owns Google Videos.

    But Google Videos is set to be disbanded and all content is being migrated to youtube.

  20. Wesman Todd Shaw profile image81
    Wesman Todd Shawposted 12 years ago

    Hey thanks for posting this thread.  I got over there and started reading the comments after reading Paul's very nice, tasteful, and to the point article - and I couldn't get over some of the shitty comments that he was faced with.  I had to jump in just a little bit.

    Comparing Hubpages to youtube is ridiculous.  People log into, or go to youtube for the sole purpose of watching, sharing, or uploading a video.  They are already on site, and can easily find anything that they are looking for - this isn't the case at all with most of the views that Hubpages gets.  Hubpages relies on search engines and keyword searches for traffic and income.  Nobody just goes to Hubpages and then looks around to see if they can find the kind of information that they are looking for.

    The only relevance that the youtube to Hubpages comparison has in it is the fact that youtube is owned by Google, is a content farm of a different variety, but a content farm just the same - and also has to deal with high levels of content that people have a right to make, enjoy making, enjoy looking at; but is still what we might consider "crap."

    So youtube not being punished by it's owners the way that hubpages has been punished by youtube's owner. . .is, in fact, a very legitimate point, IMNSHO

    1. bgamall profile image67
      bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Wrong. Youtube is on search all the time. Here is a search for fashion shows. Youtube is number 4 listing!!! http://www.google.com/search?hl=en& … l=&oq=

      1. Wesman Todd Shaw profile image81
        Wesman Todd Shawposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        I don't doubt that youtube is in search engine results - and high up in them either.  What I'm saying is that I believe that by this time in internet history - most folks just go straight to youtube, and then look for a video.

        I can only speak for me and my habits, of course - but I doubt that I'm so different.  I have a youtube channel with tons of favorites on more than a dozen playlists.  I don't upload videos, but I'm like anyone with eyes and ears - I like what I like, and want it where I can find it again.

        So I go to my youtube account often, and then I think to myself, "Hmmm.....what was that I wanted to find?  Oh, I know!  Let's search"

        . . . .and so I search from youtube's search bar.

        You know, I'm agreeing with you here - I only doubt that anywhere near as many people search for videos from Google search engine as do people searching for the types of information that can be found on hubpages - which is almost entirely information that someone would hope to find from a search engine.  The only folks that just go to Hubpages.com, and then search for information are people like you and I, who already have accounts here, and are active members of the community; and people who are looking for something from someone that they'd heard of, or heard about, or to just be nosy about someone who publishes here's business, etc.

        Sort of like how I imagine (paranoid miscreant that I am) folks do me.

        1. bgamall profile image67
          bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

          You bring up an interesting  point. If google is only interested in bringing up search results from sites that are already popular, and people don't search for them, what good is that? That is downright stupid.

          1. Wesman Todd Shaw profile image81
            Wesman Todd Shawposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            I agree.  I'm told that blogger has actually benefited from Panda, so that's one thing.

            Bgamall - I know enough about you to know that you know to follow the money, and from there the answer is clear.

            So I don't get it either - it could be that I think of Adsense as being more important to Google than it actually is.

            What do you think?  I'd think that demoting places like Hubpages just has to hurt their own income from Adsense - so is Adsense really even that big a part of Google's revenues?

            What bothered me about Paul's piece is that he'd said that Google just isn't telling him anything about what exactly constitutes "quality."  So other than the hubber community starting to "hop and flag" more often and more vigorously - it could be that a lot of these new publishing standards are of no accord to Google in the Panda age, or could even be, heaven forbid, disadvantageous.

            1. White Teeth profile image60
              White Teethposted 12 years agoin reply to this

              Maddie has said that most of the changes were planned prior to Panda.

            2. bgamall profile image67
              bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

              I think they have doubleclick and so adsense is not crucial. And I think that syndication is alive and well everywhere but here.

  21. Pearldiver profile image67
    Pearldiverposted 12 years ago

    There are 2 Threads on these issues and factually I think this one was intentionally set to allow the other to sink. The link below is a post that I have made that is, I believe, very relevant to these issues.

    I don't think I will waste my time making other posts on HP as I don't think many left here Understand the situation in it's greater form.. I don't want to speak to people who refuse to listen in, understand or acknowledge good faith. I think that 'Good Faith' has been totally compromised here and I am, as an ethical person, most disturbed by that.

    So please enjoy and understand my words on this post:

    http://hubpages.com/forum/topic/74724?p … ost1621041

    Take care.

    1. bgamall profile image67
      bgamallposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      I didn't see much at the other thread. I read it some, but there is a more interesting discussion here. Thanks for adding to it.

  22. Peggy W profile image95
    Peggy Wposted 12 years ago

    Paul's article was good.  Hopefully it will get some kind of a response from Google.  We (at least most of us) are willing to do what we can to make our hubs appear more professional if only we are given the guidelines with which to work.

    1. Sally's Trove profile image78
      Sally's Troveposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Peggy, HP has been trying to get a response from Google that means something about getting HP's rank back after Panda. So far, it's not working.

      It's got nothing to do with making "our hubs appear more professional".

      I like HP a lot and want to continue to contribute here, but HP is going through a bad time, and my making my Hubs "appear" more professional has nothing to do with their success in the future.

      My Hubs, as many others' Hubs are, are informative and worthwhile. If I now publish my articles on a site other than HP, they will get more readership via Google searches. I know this, because I've done it.

      HP is in a precarious place, and I hope it comes out of it. I choose to remain here because I like the community...in the past, I liked the opportunity for some cash, too. But HP's not delivering on earnings as they did in the past.

      I'm in "wait and see" mode.

  23. skyfire profile image80
    skyfireposted 12 years ago

    Youtube became a household name only because it was and still is more open in comparison to other platforms. Vimeo is closed to professionals and doesn't accept useless videos like YT and spam/garbage gets flushed over there. BlipTV and Buzznet have their own specific target audience. These other platforms are alive because they're targeting specific users and are not competing directly with generic sites like youtube. Clone sites which are attempting to compete with YT are not close to YT's traffic.

    Youtube is open to any type of video and that's why it was picked up by paul for comparison with hubpages (because as per him hubpages is open like YT, which is again false because you can see the new restrictions/changes).

    PR means nothing if you don't get any traffic like YT which in turn reflects in advertiser bids.  PR also mean zilch if you're competing with brand which is a household name or first product in the market. PR and Alexa looks good only during Flippa sales.

  24. thisisoli profile image70
    thisisoliposted 12 years ago

    *edit* Ignore mis-spellings - having to get some client work pushed out at the same time so can't spend much time in the forums!

  25. thisisoli profile image70
    thisisoliposted 12 years ago

    (I get the feeling the horrible feeling the current Hubpages campaign against Affilaite links is because they did not distinguish between Affiliate Sites and Affilaite Links in a quote from Google)

    1. Jason Menayan profile image61
      Jason Menayanposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      That's not the reason. We're well aware of the difference.

      We don't allow affiliate links in certain areas, and we don't allow certain affiliate links, because they tend to come with lots of poor quality content and spammy promotional techniques.

      As Maddie has said, we were planning to make these changes before the Panda rollout, and we are very much aware of what we're losing (and gaining) by restricting the use of affiliate links.

      1. thisisoli profile image70
        thisisoliposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        Doesn't that mean you should be going after the low quality content providers though, rather than anyone who uses a certain affiliate?

        1. Jason Menayan profile image61
          Jason Menayanposted 12 years agoin reply to this

          We do allow affiliate links.

          We don't allow certain ones that have a history of bringing in poor-quality, spun content, or the use of affiliate links in certain topic areas that similarly attract poor-quality, spun content.

          1. IzzyM profile image86
            IzzyMposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            Jason, on a warning email I received yesterday, they listed two hubs that may face future unpublication because they were on spammy subjects that contained affiliate links.

            Those affiliate links were to amazon.co.uk which I believe is on your allowed links.

            What I did, was I hit the button on 'Do not Display this Capsule' and the warnings within the hub went away.

            Are affiliate links as such allowed or not? I don't like this guessing game. If they are allowed, why was the warning on the hub?

            If they are allowed, why were they mentioned in the email.

            Can I have those links or not?

            1. Jason Menayan profile image61
              Jason Menayanposted 12 years agoin reply to this

              IzzyM: Amazon.co.uk are considered affiliate links, but not prohibited affiliate links. The latter are not allowed at all, but the former are only allowed in topic areas that are not restricted. I don't know what that Hub is about, but I suppose it is one of those restricted areas, so I'm afraid Amazon.co.uk links are not allowed.

              1. IzzyM profile image86
                IzzyMposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                Doesn't really make sense then. The topic is about a certain weight loss supplement, around which I have built and series of hubs and interlinked them. As the purpose of the hubs are to sell that product, they have Amazon capsules with the permitted number of product listings.
                People in my side of the world do not buy from Amazon.com - the postage alone would be prohibitive. That is why the co.uk link is there.
                So under the new ruling, I have to close off a good section of the world as a potential market?
                Oh OK.
                Just seems a bit odd.

                1. White Teeth profile image60
                  White Teethposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                  Hubpages does not receive a cut from Amazon.co.uk, so these are “spammy” affiliate links like any of the other affiliate links being posted in weight loss, forex, etc…

                  According to Hubpages, weight loss is a “spammy” topic area like forex and the others. This is actually one of the things that many of the forum posters here demanded(!) in the witch-hunt – to crack down on these “spammy” topic areas. Hubpages is doing this by removing the incentive (affiliate links) to post in these topic areas.

                  All the witch-hunters should be cheering this…

                  1. IzzyM profile image86
                    IzzyMposted 12 years agoin reply to this

                    Hmm...but they already said Amazon.co.uk was OK? Well if its a cut they want, I am happy to give it. There is software now that can make the viewer see their local Amazon whether that be Europe or Australia or whatever, instead of just Amazon.com ads in the capsules.
                    Time for HP to embrace the world?

  26. rebekahELLE profile image85
    rebekahELLEposted 12 years ago



    I think it's a pretty good chunk of their revenue coming from their own sites and their network member's websites.



    http://investor.google.com/financial/tables.html (I'm not sure why it says millions, the financial reports state revenues in billions)

    Google Network Revenues – Google’s partner sites generated revenues, through AdSense programs, of $2.43 billion, or 28% of total revenues, in the first quarter of 2011.  This represents a 19% increase from first quarter 2010 network revenues of $2.04 billion

    http://investor.google.com/earnings/201 … nings.html

    1. janderson99 profile image53
      janderson99posted 12 years agoin reply to this

      This is Interesting.

      I ran a search to investigate the example Paul uses concerning a Knol duplicate article ranking more highly than the original hubpages article.

      http://techcrunch.com/2011/05/05/google … mpetition/

      For the exact title of the 'barbecue tools article'  the knol article appears as # 1

      http://s3.hubimg.com/u/5013858_f248.jpg

      The hubpage article appears as #6

      http://s3.hubimg.com/u/5013862_f248.jpg

      Notice the summary description for the hub is very poor (not user friendly)

      All notice the "Block all Huppage Results"  !!!!!!

      Its a worry!

      1. Cagsil profile image70
        Cagsilposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        I just did a search on Google for "barbecue tools" and didn't find Hubpages.com or any Hub in the results on the first three pages.

        Much less...Block All Hubpages Results . hmm

        1. janderson99 profile image53
          janderson99posted 12 years agoin reply to this

          Maybe its because I'm on OZ

          Search for 'Barbecue Tools that Make a Great Gift Set'

          1. Cagsil profile image70
            Cagsilposted 12 years agoin reply to this

            Why would I have to search for those specific words, when those type of sites came up in the listing. hmm

        2. Barbara Kay profile image73
          Barbara Kayposted 12 years agoin reply to this

          I did the search and I got the same results without the Block All Hubpage Results.

      2. IzzyM profile image86
        IzzyMposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        I'm not seeing that on my localised version of Google.com. what I did find is one result if I put my search into quotes.
        http://www.webanswers.com/misc/has-any- … nol-a25787

  27. sunforged profile image68
    sunforgedposted 12 years ago

    I get knol at 2 and hubs at 5 - with a cookie free browser.

    The "block all __________ "will appear on any listing if you quickly hit back after entering a site, its not specific to Hubpages.

    1. Jason Menayan profile image61
      Jason Menayanposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Yes, that's right. Thank you for clarifying that.

  28. sunforged profile image68
    sunforgedposted 12 years ago

    Ive seen that sort of application at work, it works pretty well, who knew Germans liked Jeans so much! smile

    1. IzzyM profile image86
      IzzyMposted 12 years agoin reply to this

      Exactly, SF, a whole world awaits the affiliate marketer through Amazon and its multi-language/multi-culture support.

      Getting back to an original topic on this thread about search results, I lost a column in my Excel sheet. Don't know where it went but column AC was missing. Obviously this knocked a lot of things out, through the columns round about still referenced it, so it wasn't deleted, just not there.

      So I Googled 'missing column Excel 2007'.

      The first result provided an answer for Excel 2003, so no use.
      The second was an Ehow article that was just totally wrong. Couldn't be done - whoever wrote it copied it from somewhere but got it wrong.
      Third was a site that wanted to to click yet more links, and the 4th result from techspot.com was spot on!

      Why on Earth is it 4th? It should be first.

      1. prettydarkhorse profile image62
        prettydarkhorseposted 12 years agoin reply to this

        With all their millions of servers, G don't know what is spot on. They are just machines with numeric quantitative codes, but quality can never be quantified. They can't afford gazzillion of moderators to look at million of pages (and that is not possible).

        G is shifting the burden to us up to some extent by letting us evaluate content by us looking at the sites which are useful and of quality (user interaction - like bounce rate) and us blocking some sites.

  29. LuisEGonzalez profile image78
    LuisEGonzalezposted 12 years ago

    Let's face it, whether we agree with Google or not there are very few things that we can do. But we must admit that there are tons of great hubs and equally tons of bad ones. By the efforts of some, including Hubbers, we are helping to make HP a better platform. I don't particularly like flagging hubs, but find it a necessity for the benefit of the site and its members.

    As HP becomes ever more popular the market should influence Google to change their system or adjust it towards a more friendlier atmosphere to sites like HP.

  30. psycheskinner profile image83
    psycheskinnerposted 12 years ago

    If they wanted to do that they could just pull the plug, given that most are monetized with adsense.

  31. JulieBMack profile image60
    JulieBMackposted 12 years ago

    I think in many ways the Google Panda changes are good!  Quality needs to start rising about all the junk on content sites. As a writer I appreciate the reason this is happening.  I think many if the sites are just scrambling and may not be going about it in the best way.  In the end, I think it will work itself out.

  32. profile image0
    Sophia Angeliqueposted 12 years ago

    I have the highest respect for Paul and Robin Edmonson. I have absolutely no doubt whatsoever that they will do everything in their power to make HP work again.

    However, as Paul so eloquently  expresses in his article, right now, the playing fields are not equal. As I expressed over the last few months, blogger gained 25$ in the rankings, and was the only blogging site to gain that much. As Paul has expressed, youtube (another google website) did not lose, despite lots of bad stuff.

    It's a really difficult situation. For the time being, I'm focusing on the other things. However, I'm leaving my hubs here and I'm complying with HP in everything. I still think this is a fantastic site, but unhappily, when something is as good as HP, it will always attract those that will take unfair advantage.

 
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