Streamlined Site
This morning you may notice some subtle changes to Searchblog. We're working to fix some design inconsistencies, clean up the back end code, and streamline the search and archives function. Please give me feedback! Thanks….
This morning you may notice some subtle changes to Searchblog. We're working to fix some design inconsistencies, clean up the back end code, and streamline the search and archives function. Please give me feedback! Thanks….
Way back in the early days of this site, when its pagerank crossed 5 or so and traffic started to pick up, I got hit by some pretty hardcore comment spammers. This was not hand rolled stuff, this was robot love, and lots of it. It brought the CPU…
Of course, we all know why folks comment spam – to gain search juice. My fearless sysadmin and I fought back with all manners of countermeasures, and we ultimately found a solution which pretty much defeated the robots – a neat little hack that pretty much ensures robots cannot get in. Humans, however, can still get in, in particular if they obey some simple rules – no more than two embedded URLs in the comment, and no previous record of bad behavior.
Well, I’m sad to say it seems that a new form of comment spam has sprung up – the human comment spammer. I’ve been somewhat bipolar about these guys – I mean, they have to earn a living, and sometimes their attempts at feigning relevance are hilarious – but it’s time to draw the line. More often than not, they leave relatively inane comments, like the one in the title of this post, and are nearly always hopelessly polite. They usually have no more than one link, often to some random site in Germany or Bulgaria looking for search wuffie.
Read MoreWell, this ought to catch some folks attention, written by the fellow who called Amazon $400: I'm just laying out a scenario that could kneecap Google and take its stock back to, say, $100 a share. Google's major weakness is that it is almost entirely dependent on one, high-margin…
I’m just laying out a scenario that could kneecap Google and take its stock back to, say, $100 a share.
Google’s major weakness is that it is almost entirely dependent on one, high-margin revenue stream. The company has dozens of cool products, but with the exception of AdWords, none of them generate meaningful revenue. From an intermediate-term financial perspective, therefore, they are irrelevant.
Read MoreAlexandre Douzet, Co-Founder and Vice President, Marketing at job site TheLadders.com, has authored a paper on PPC search and the cost of acquisition. I'm not all the way through it, but it feels like a good read for those who are interested in a general overview of PPC marketing,…
I'm focused on pushing a rev of the new FM site this week, so my posts are short, not very analytical, and basically not very fun. For me to write, or, I imagine, for you to read. But I do have a lot on my mind, so stay with…
Sure, I'm a Mac bigot. But w000000000000000t!…
Man, lots of M&A. Truveo video search was featured at the Search SIG I moderated a couple of months ago. AOL now owns it. From the release: AOL’s acquisition agreement with Truveo was signed and closed on December 21, 2005. Financial terms were not disclosed. Truveo was previously privately…
Man, lots of M&A. Truveo video search was featured at the Search SIG I moderated a couple of months ago. AOL now owns it. From the release:
AOL’s acquisition agreement with Truveo was signed and closed on December 21, 2005. Financial terms were not disclosed. Truveo was previously privately held, and financed by strategic venture and angel investors.
Truveo ( http://www.truveo.com ), based in Burlingame, California, was co-founded by CEO Dr. Tim Tuttle and CTO Dr. Adam Beguelin in January 2004. Truveo subsequently launched its premier video search engine technology in September 2005.
Read MoreMiva, which plays in the second tier of PPC networks (it used to be called FindWhat), is "considering strategic alternatives." I've heard a lot of scuttlebutt that Miva's network is fraught with clickfraud and other traffic of not so great intent. I wonder how this will play out. The…
Tristan has the scoop and an interview with the founder. A few minutes ago, I learned that Yahoo! acquired WebJay, a site that allows for categorization, editing, listening, and sharing of playlists online (In a way, it can easily be compared to del.icio.us for multimedia.) WebJay was created in…
A few minutes ago, I learned that Yahoo! acquired WebJay, a site that allows for categorization, editing, listening, and sharing of playlists online (In a way, it can easily be compared to del.icio.us for multimedia.) WebJay was created in early 2004 as a way to create the internet equivalent of mix tapes. Lucas Gonze, the creator of WebJay agreed to taking a few minutes of his time to do a quick IM interview between meetings. Following is the transcript of that interview:
Jakob posts. Danny responds. Great stuff….