shags38
Top Contributor
I saw some interesting comments in another thread about Google now suggesting they will be vetting the quality of content as well as originality, however I decided it was not really on topic to continue to comment in that thread - in particular was a comment "original doesn't mean quality" in respect to content as about to be assessed by Google crawlers following the Panda algorithm update. The comment was made in support of Googles apparent new stance that it will be assessing the "quality" of content as well as its originality
It begs the question, even with a thousand Pandas how will a Robot determine the quality of the content of an article or paragraph or even a simple sentence. Take a look at the articles in all of the article sites, including e-zine, and you will see myriads of examples of poorly written articles that ramble on in a pointless charade of keyword nonsense (like most of my posts in here) - most are written by Asians or Indians (no racial slurs intended) who do not have command of the English language and who are pumping articles out faster than rice bubbles leaving a cereal box in the hands of a two year old.
I have over 2000 sites parked at WhyPark and I am continually bitching to them about the second rate quality of their articles to no avail of course - they get them from the same sources as everyone else even though they claim them to be proprietary. The point being that a Robot cannot determine the correctness, and hence quality of the statements in the content, the spelling in may cases (did you loose something?? - lose / loose is a perfect example among many of incorrect spelling in context but is ok with spell check robots). How can a robot determine the quality of an argument or a sales pitch or the flowering of specifications or of say creative accounting?? I say Red is a mixture of seventeen variations of certain colours (colors), someone else says sixteen and there not being a mathematically correct answer the robot cannot offer a quality assessment.
Will Googlebot start rating the quality of statements of philosophers both past and present?
Google is an advertising company - it needs to reassure its paying advertisers, the big fellas who help make up the Billions spent with Google Adwords, that they are continually working for them in driving to achieve continual improvement in the quality of search results. In doing so they "indoctrinate" many and scare most into certain trains of thought that they engender.
I will take a power of convincing that a robot, regardless of the algorithms poured into it, can determine "quality" of the written word in volume when it struggles in isolation (lose / loose example again). Highly educated humans, people with very high intelligence quotients, people who have dedicated their whole lives to writing / writings (and this includes Lawyers) often cannot agree on the interpretation of the written word or verse.
In the eyes of GoogleBot and other search engine robots original = quality, it cannot be any other way until the day of the development of computers with true intelligence (not algorithms which are mathematically based). Even "original" is variable - when statements to the effect of "changing an article by about 30% of its content makes the new article original in the eyes of Google" is stated by experts it suggests a blight on the meaning of the word original. Google knows it is almost impossible for the volume of content of the web for a certain subject to all be original - there is only so much one can write about an apple before you venture close to or over the line of repetition or even plagiarism.
What Panda did apparently suggest was that "longer" content pages would be favored, i.e. more words, not necessarily quality, but more words to a page and a higher ratio of written content versus images / videos / ads etc on a page. (page - not site - google ranks pages, not sites)
But hey what would I know about this subject? I just know that Google has a lot of people bluffed and scared, eating out of their hand - quite an achievement for an advertising company - more power and influence than the President of the USA. Matt Cutts or anyone at Google makes a comment and a ripple becomes a Tsunami.
...... and so as the sun begins to set (rise actually) I bring my prose to a close
any comments girls?
cheers,
Mike
It begs the question, even with a thousand Pandas how will a Robot determine the quality of the content of an article or paragraph or even a simple sentence. Take a look at the articles in all of the article sites, including e-zine, and you will see myriads of examples of poorly written articles that ramble on in a pointless charade of keyword nonsense (like most of my posts in here) - most are written by Asians or Indians (no racial slurs intended) who do not have command of the English language and who are pumping articles out faster than rice bubbles leaving a cereal box in the hands of a two year old.
I have over 2000 sites parked at WhyPark and I am continually bitching to them about the second rate quality of their articles to no avail of course - they get them from the same sources as everyone else even though they claim them to be proprietary. The point being that a Robot cannot determine the correctness, and hence quality of the statements in the content, the spelling in may cases (did you loose something?? - lose / loose is a perfect example among many of incorrect spelling in context but is ok with spell check robots). How can a robot determine the quality of an argument or a sales pitch or the flowering of specifications or of say creative accounting?? I say Red is a mixture of seventeen variations of certain colours (colors), someone else says sixteen and there not being a mathematically correct answer the robot cannot offer a quality assessment.
Will Googlebot start rating the quality of statements of philosophers both past and present?
Google is an advertising company - it needs to reassure its paying advertisers, the big fellas who help make up the Billions spent with Google Adwords, that they are continually working for them in driving to achieve continual improvement in the quality of search results. In doing so they "indoctrinate" many and scare most into certain trains of thought that they engender.
I will take a power of convincing that a robot, regardless of the algorithms poured into it, can determine "quality" of the written word in volume when it struggles in isolation (lose / loose example again). Highly educated humans, people with very high intelligence quotients, people who have dedicated their whole lives to writing / writings (and this includes Lawyers) often cannot agree on the interpretation of the written word or verse.
In the eyes of GoogleBot and other search engine robots original = quality, it cannot be any other way until the day of the development of computers with true intelligence (not algorithms which are mathematically based). Even "original" is variable - when statements to the effect of "changing an article by about 30% of its content makes the new article original in the eyes of Google" is stated by experts it suggests a blight on the meaning of the word original. Google knows it is almost impossible for the volume of content of the web for a certain subject to all be original - there is only so much one can write about an apple before you venture close to or over the line of repetition or even plagiarism.
What Panda did apparently suggest was that "longer" content pages would be favored, i.e. more words, not necessarily quality, but more words to a page and a higher ratio of written content versus images / videos / ads etc on a page. (page - not site - google ranks pages, not sites)
But hey what would I know about this subject? I just know that Google has a lot of people bluffed and scared, eating out of their hand - quite an achievement for an advertising company - more power and influence than the President of the USA. Matt Cutts or anyone at Google makes a comment and a ripple becomes a Tsunami.
...... and so as the sun begins to set (rise actually) I bring my prose to a close
any comments girls?
cheers,
Mike