Google Penguin
Google Penguin is a code name[1] for a Google algorithm update that was first announced on April 24, 2012.[2] The update is aimed at decreasing search engine rankings of websites that violate Google’s Webmaster Guidelines [3] by using black-hat SEO techniques such as keyword stuffing,[4] cloaking,[5] participating in link schemes,[6] deliberate creation of duplicate content,[7] and others.
Naming the algorithm update
Penguin update went live on April 24, 2012. However, Google had not come up with an official name for it until two days later.[1] Search Engine Land, a popular online magazine that covers search news, asked their readers to provide suggestions on how to name the new algorithm change on Google+[8] and Facebook.[9] Among the popular suggestion were "Pi", "OOPs", "Shark Update" and "Titanic" (the absolute leader).
Penguin’s effect on Google search results
By Google’s estimates,[2] Penguin affects approximately 3.1% of search queries in English, about 3% of queries in languages like German, Chinese, and Arabic, and an even bigger percentage of them in "highly-spammed" languages.
The differences between Penguin and previous updates
Before Penguin, Google released a series of algorithm updates called Panda[10] that first appeared in February 2011. Panda aimed at downranking websites that provided poor user experience. To identify such websites, a machine-learning algorithm by Navneet Panda[11] was used, hence the name. The algorithm follows the logic by which Google’s human quality raters[12] determine a website’s quality. In January 2012, so-called page layout algorithm update[13] was released, which targeted websites with little content above the fold.[14] The strategic goal that Panda, Penguin and page layout update share is to display higher quality websites at the top of Google’s search results. However, sites that got downranked as the result of these updates have different sets of characteristics.
Google’s Penguin feedback form
Two days after Penguin update was released, Google prepared a feedback form,[15][16] designed for two categories of users: those who want to report web spam that still ranks highly after the search algorithm change, and those who think that their site got unfairly hit by the update. Google also has a reconsideration form through Google Webmaster Tools for the 700,000 sites who received an email stating their sites demonstrated unusual linking.
Google does not offer any support out side the forms and there have been no instances that Google is following up with those submitting the forms.
See also
References
- ^ a b The Penguin Update: Google's Webspam Algorithm Gets Official Name
- ^ a b Another step to reward high-quality sites - Inside Search
- ^ Webmaster Guidelines - Webmaster Tools Help
- ^ Keyword stuffing - Webmaster Tools Help
- ^ Cloaking, sneaky Javascript redirects, and doorway pages - Webmaster Tools Help
- ^ Link schemes - Webmaster Tools Help
- ^ Duplicate content - Webmaster Tools Help
- ^ Search Engine Land Survey - Google+
- ^ Search Engine Land Survey - Facebook
- ^ Infographic: The Google Panda Update, One Year Later
- ^ http://alumni.cs.ucsb.edu/~panda/published_papers/acmmm_06.pdf
- ^ How Google Uses Human Raters in Organic Search - SEW
- ^ Official Google Webmaster Central Blog: Page layout algorithm improvement
- ^ Browser Size - Google Labs
- ^ https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dEVxdmdRWFJRTjRoLWZVTHZkaTBQbkE6MQ
- ^ Penguin Update Peck Your Site By Mistake? Google's Got A Form For That
- ^ "Google Penguin Hits". Retrieved 2012-05-17.
External links
- Google Penguin Update: Impact of Anchor Text Diversity & Link Relevancy - Search Engine Watch (#SEW)
- Crafting An Evil Empire: Looting The Competition with Negative SEO – A Story | Search Engine Journal
- WebProWorld - Search Engine Optimization Forum - Can Penguins Fly?
- WebProNews - Should The Google Penguin Update Hit Sites Like WPMU.org?
- Wall Street Journal - As Google Tweaks Searches, Some Get Lost in the Web