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Showing posts with label Blogging - Problems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogging - Problems. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Black Hat SEO: Keyword String Usernames

Imagine my surprise when a few days ago I received a message from a company that in the past had SPAM'ed my website using keyword strings as their name. They needed to ask me to remove their old SPAM comments to help get them out of trouble with Google!

The SEO company this company hired used a keyword string username and blog comments to create links back to their website to try to trick Google into thinking their site was more popular than it was.

So, how did this happen? Have you ever heard the term "Black Hat SEO?"

It's the practice of using unethical means to either obtain a higher search engine page rank or to trick people into coming to your website using deceptive means. It can be a common practice among the types of companies that send you emails promising you first page placement on Google, for a fee.

One of the Black Hat tricks that irks me is when people use a string of keywords (a type of keyword stuffing) when leaving a comment on my blog instead of their real, user or business name. Why? Because using a keyword string says in an overly obvious way that you are using my blog to try to increase your own search engine ranking. I even blogged about it before.

An example of what I mean is when I leave a comment on someone's blog I use one of the following names: Stacie Tamaki, The Flirty Girl (my Twitter handle) or The Flirty Blog or The Flirty Guide because that's my real name, online usernames and business name. My rule of thumb is how would I introduce myself to someone in a face to face meeting? If I wouldn't say it, I shouldn't post it.

I would say I'm the Flirty Blog or Guide because that's how some people know me.

If I was going to be spammy I would post my name on other people's sites as one of the following strings of keywords with the name being a link back to my own website:

SF Bay Area Blogger
Custom Website Design and Development
Volunteer National Bone Marrow Donor Recruiter
Halloween Dog Costume Designer

So it's something that can be considered bad form to use a keyword string in place of your name. I'll often delete these comments if they're off topic but sometimes I let them slide if it's obvious the person at least read the post.

The moral of this story is when someone contacts you and says they can improve your search engine ranking for a fee, make sure what they're going to do isn't going to get you in trouble with Google. Black Hat SEO is a short-sighted solution (gaming the search engines for a higher page rank) to a long term problem, getting banned by the search engines so that your site isn't indexed at all. It's like that old saying "If something sounds too good to be true. . ." The way I look at it, they're sending out the email they sent to you to thousands of other website owners. So how can they promise thousands of people they can place all of them in the top ten on Google? Only ten people can be in the top ten.

Some of these pitches may be legit but the buzz words raised red flags for me.

The best way to increase your page rank is to create useful, informative content and update your website or blog on a regular basis. If you really want to hire someone make sure they are using only White Hat SEO (ethical techniques) to achieve your higher page rank. It will be you, not them, who pays the price for any shady games a Black Hat SEO company uses to damage your online page rank and reputation for their own monetary gain.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Stories from the Shoebox made me laugh

Oh the horror. As a blogger I can only imagine being a victim of the Picassa deletion phenomenon that's taken place across the internet ever since Google+ was launched. It's been a while so I thought Google had come up with a better warning system to let new Google+ users know that if they delete the Picasa web albums they see on Google+ they aren't deleting copies of their Picasa albums, even though they're logged into Google+, they are deleting their original albums over on Picasa where all of their blog photos are stored.


It's not until a blogger goes to their Blogspot blog and sees this that they realize something's amiss.


So, when I received comments from a reader on a post I wrote warning people about this phenomenon I felt so bad for her I went to her blog to read her post "An Open Letter to Google." And it was HILARIOUS! I felt bad laughing at her misfortune but I couldn't help it. After tweeting that she hated Google Adrienne says:
. . .But then? I got scared. Aside from being out of character and unprofessional of me. I was really second guessing my decision to tweet bash you. I got all worried you might take me out. I mean, I'm just some lowly mom who writes on Blogger. But, doesn't that pretty much mean you own me? So perhaps tweeting that I hate you wasn't the best move. SO? I deleted my tweet like a coward with no shame. . 
LOL. I love Adrienne's humor. Really love it. Plus her post contains a valuable warning for other Blogspot users.


In the hopes of cheering her up a bit I went ahead and signed up for her RSS feed to subscribe to her blog.


For anyone curious my favorite reader is NetNewsWire Lite.


Then I followed her on the friend connect feature on Google...


See, I did it!


Then I followed her on Twitter. I bet if you go check out her blog it'll cheer her up just a bit. Not enough to make up for losing all of her photos but new visitors always makes a blogger feel better :)

Thursday, July 28, 2011

More on Missing Blogger Photos and Google+ (Update 2)

If you know anyone who uses a Blogger/Blogspot blog please forward this post to them before they join Google+. It is a follow up to two previous posts:

Synopsis of Problem: As more people join Google+ many bloggers who use the Blogger/Blogspot platform are inadvertently and irretrievably deleting all of their blog images from the Google+ interface. Some have been blogging for years and there is no feasible way for them to go back and re-add the hundreds or thousands of missing photos back into their blog. Especially if they didn't keep copies of their original image files.

If however you only changed your privacy settings from "Public" to "Limited" simply re-setting the album back to "Public" will make the images visible once again. You can do this from Google+ by clicking on the "Photos" link in the black tool bar at the top of your browser. Select the "Actions" then "Album Properties" and look for the visibility option in the lower left corner of the dialogue box. Re-set to "Public on the web."

Despite assurances from a Google Team Member in the "Recovering Deleted Photos" below that a warning was added to the Google+ end where users were seeing and deleting the albums, others have posted in other forums that even since the warning went into place they have not received it and deleted their albums without realizing the connection they had to their Blogger blogs.

Sources where I read about this problem include:


The Problem in Pictures



Here is a screenshot that clearly shows the problem. Look at the upper left corner. It shows the Google+ logo and some of the Picasa photo albums that contain my blog images. They showed up automatically when I joined Google+.



Now look at the upper left corner when I'm on Picasa. It shows the Picasa logo and the same photo albums.

Apparently, Google assumed viewers would know they were looking at their original photos being stored for their Blogger blog on both websites. The problem is, a lot of people didn't. In fact many thought the albums on Google+ were duplicates of their images on Picasa and deleted them, thus deleting all of the images forever as Picasa had no backup of the files that could be retrieved when the problem was discovered.

To add to the confusion a lot of Blogger bloggers did not, and some still don't, realize that Blogger stores their uploaded blog photos on Picasa.



In Picasa I did receive this dialogue box that alerts me that the Picasa and Google+ are somehow connected. But, some people are reading this box, thinking they don't want their photos shared with their Google+ friends sharing their photos in their circles:

"Albums you've shared can in turn be tagged and shared by others"

The way this line reads seems to remove all privacy options for the original owner of the photos. So, people started deleting the Picasa account or some of the albums not realizing that as they did they were irretrievably removing the photos from their Blogger blog.

Some users went to Picasa for the first time and saw duplicate images.

Also, unbeknownst to a lot of Blogger bloggers, when you use the built in photo uploader you can delete an uploaded image from a blog post but Picasa will continue to store that image until you go to Picasa and delete it from your photo album there. If you upload an image multiple times, this results in multiple copies of the image being stored.

After joining Google+ other users went to Picasa for the first time and saw duplicate images like the sample above. Not wanting to store unneeded photos and not seeing a way to delete individual images while on Google+ they begin deleting entire albums not realizing they were deleting all of the images from their Blogger blog.


The comments by those this has happened to are, especially for fellow bloggers, pretty heartbreaking. Imagine if I lost all of my photos from five years of blogging because I deleted my albums by accident. Ugh. Someone would have to come find me and console me. I can't even imagine how upset I would be.

I will continue to update on this topic until a fail-safe warning or retrieval system becomes available because I don't want to see this happen to any other Blogger bloggers out there.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Missing Photos on Blogger Blogs and Google+ (Update 1)

If you know anyone who uses a Blogger/Blogspot blog please forward this post to them before they join Google+. It is a follow up to yesterday's post WARNING: To Bloggers Who Use Blogger/Blogspot, Missing Images and Joining Google+

Synopsis of Problem: As more people join Google+ many bloggers who use the Blogger/Blogspot platform are inadvertently and irretrievably deleting all of their blog images from the Google+ interface. Some have been blogging for years and there is no feasible way for them to go back and re-add the thousands of missing photos back into their blog.

If however you only changed your privacy settings from "Public" to "Limited" simply re-setting the album back to "Public" will make the images visible once again. You can do this from Google+ by clicking on the "Photos" link in the black tool bar at the top of your browser. Select the "Actions" then "Album Properties" and look for the visibility option in the lower left corner of the dialogue box. Re-set to "Public on the web."




Here's how it happens. This is what my "Your albums" view looks like on Google+


If I click on the album titled "Blogger Photos" this is what I see. Multiple versions of some of the same images. I have no idea why I uploaded these same thumbnails to use as profile pictures so many times but herein lies the problem: People who just joined Google+ basically stumble upon these photo albums for the first time ever while on Google+, not realizing they are the photos they've added to their blog via the photo uploader in Blogger. They think there is no need to keep them because why do I need five or six versions of the same photo on Google+?


When I click on one of the images this is how it pulls up the enlargement of that image. There is no obvious way to discern how many times this photo has been viewed or why there are so many copies of the same image.

As a reflex, many people are choosing to delete the album because they aren't logged in to Blogger nor are they on Picasa where their uploaded blog images have been stored. Even those who realize their blog images are hosted on Picasa reasonably assume they are viewing copies of their blog images that were added to Google+.

The thing is, they are viewing the original images on Picasa even though the header at the top of the page reads Google+. So they delete the album on Google+ which means they just irretrievably deleted the same photos from their blog.

So many people have done this that Google has added a dialogue box to warn people that Google+, Picasa and Blogger are all interconnected.

But in my opinion, their warning is still insufficient.


Just this morning I tried deleting an unneeded album while on Google+ to see what would happen. When I clicked on the "Delete Album" button above is what happened. A small and nondescript dialogue box opened warning me that if I permanently delete this album it will remove the photos from all Google products including Picasa and Blogger.


My question to Google is: Why is this box so nondescript when they are potentially communicating with people who may be about to inadvertently delete hundreds or even thousands of photos from years of adding them to their Blogger blogs? That's a big deal. It seems to me there should be:
  1. A larger box
  2. A larger font
  3. The warning should be in bold
  4. The name of Blogger should precede Picasa since many users don't understand their images are stored on Picasa
  5. Instead of saying "reverted" say "undone" because it's easier to understand
  6. The box should be more urgent in appearance utilizing the color red as a border to signify its importance 
This is what I think the dialogue box should look like instead.

As I continued to research last evening I found more and more examples of people deleting their Blogger photos by accident which made me wonder why Google doesn't also send an email to all Blogger accounts that this is an issue to be aware of when joining Google+.

It is so disheartening to know that many more new users to Google+ will most likely continue to accidentally delete their blog images not realizing until too late they will not be able to undo what they have done.



Related posts on this subject here on The Flirty Blog are:

7/28/11
More on Missing Blogger Photos and Google+ (Update 2)

7/21/11
WARNING: To Bloggers Who Use Blogger/Blogspot, Missing Images and Joining Google+

Thursday, July 21, 2011

WARNING: To Bloggers Who Use Blogger/Blogspot, Missing Images and Joining Google+

I think a lot of Blogger/Blogspot users wrongly assume their uploaded images are stored on Blogger/Blogspot. But they aren't. They are stored on Picasa.

A friend, who recently joined Google+, just messaged me that almost all of their photos on their Blogger/Blogspot blog are missing.

I did some research for them and soon discovered there are at least two ways this can happen. One is extremely concerning because it involves Google+.  As more people join the new social network it's inevitable that unless/until Google+ more clearly explains to new users that removing their existing Picasa Web account, albums or images can directly effect their blog images, new Google+ users may continue to inadvertently delete all of their existing blog images which, as it turns out, is what my friend did.

DO NOT Delete your Picasa Web to join Google+ if you are a Blogger/Blogspot user.

If you haven't already joined Google+ but intend to do so you need to be aware that if you are using the image uploader provided by Blogger to add photos to your blog posts those photos are being stored in a Picasa web photo album associated to your blog.

I believe it's the second item in the screenshot image above that people are concerned about. It's the one that says:

"Your album's visibility settings aren't changed, but people they're shared with can now share them with others."

You read this and decide you don't want to let your friends on Google+ share your images with their friends.

This means if you:
  1. Remove images from your blog's Picasa album
  2. Delete the album completely
  3. Delete your Picasa account
  4. Assume the album you see in Google+ is a duplicate (it's the original) and delete it (ETA: I read online the Photos Community Manager Brian Rose said in a Google Group that Google will ". . .make it clearer that your Picasa photos themselves are displayed on Google+ and not copied" which should solve this problem.)
  5. Create a new Gmail account and move your blog to the new account then delete the original Gmail account (This is the only non-Google+ issue)
You will lose all of your blog images hosted in the associated Picasa photo album(s) meaning they will disappear from your blog. Forever. 

Every missing image on your blog will look like this :(

The only way I've found so far to recover your missing Blogger images after joining Google+ is if you "hid" and didn't "delete" them. This means you already joined Google+ and chose to make your Picasa albums "private" your images are recoverable and will still be there when you simply make your Picasa account public again making the images viewable to everybody.

There is also the possibility that somehow your Picasa privacy settings changed to a "Limited" viewing option so be sure to confirm that they are set to "Public."



ETA: Follow up posts on this subject here on The Flirty Blog are:

7/28/11
More on Missing Blogger Photos and Google+ (Update 2)

7/22/11
Missing Photos on Blogger Blogs and Google+ (Update 1) includes screenshots of the current (imo insufficient) warning dialog box on Google+.



Sources where I read about this problem include:


Use Google Takeout to Archive Your Images:

Also helpful, I didn't know until reading the final link above that Google offers a back up option called Google Takeout. You can archive and create back ups of the following Google data options:


I just backed up my Picasa albums. Five years of blog photos took less than 5 minutes to save.

Joining Google+

I joined and had no problems because I didn't delete or modify my Picasa account. So if you want to join Google+ and have the opportunity to, go ahead and join. Just don't delete your Picasa account or your Blogger albums that are kept there.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Do You Find Blogging to be a Challenge?

For a lot of people blogging is difficult because they say they don't have enough time, they don't write well or they feel they have nothing to say.

My largest blogging challenge isn't ever that I don't have the time or I've run out of things to share with my readers. No, my biggest challenge is furry and grey and weighs around 9 lbs and drools every time he's within a foot of me.

Squash, our cat, always wants to be petted. When I'm typing on my keyboard my hands become vulnerable to not only the typical "Hey I'm a kitty so I'm going to rub my head all over your hands" kind of action a lot of cats try to pull but Squash also drools whenever he's near me or whenever we make eye contact from across the room. LOL

Squash also goes one step further and actually sleeps on my hand, as I'm typing, making it very difficult for me to type quickly or correctly. That's what he's doing in the picture above. Sleeping on my hand!

My main point is that we all have our challenges but we should all keep blogging. I don't let my kitty cat handicap stop me, though I have mentioned in the past that it may effect the quality of some of my posts. You shouldn't let anything stop you either!

=^..^=