Life Online at the National Media Museum We have opened the world’s first gallery dedicated to exploring the social, technological and cultural impact of the…
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Dumb SEO Questions 22
1:17 – Google Analytics Content reports thousands of urls that end with “?” 8:02 – Optimizing english vs non english site 11:55 – SEO optimization for photos (Picasa) 15:02 – Is this new? Displaying IP address in SERPs? 16:44 – Is there no Local Search Data in Adwords keyword tool? 27:16 – Changing meta tags for a page make it fresh and increase its ranking? 29:29 – Part I: Seen and read and understands this (quality raters)? 32:57 – Guest blogging and getting high-profile links. 35:02 – Why is Google indexing my sitemap file and my robots.txt file? 36:43 – Which is the best SEO Tool for duplicate content problem? 41:37 – How long does it takes to get indexed for a brand new website? 43:11 – No ‘description’ meta tag on spidertest(dot)com? 45:24 – OMG CloudFlare has gone down, this is bad news!! 46:57 – That didn’t last long. (interflora) 1:31:13 – walkernews*net is ranking on google.com.au for [Google USA]? 1:36:39 – Google analytics and tracking time spend on a survey 1:45:54 – How to recover from penguin updates? 1:56:03 – Are testimonials reviews with regard to rich snippets? 2:11:19 – YouTube, Vimeo or self-host video and SEO 2:16:29 – Google granted patent on invisible text and hidden links 2:18:13 – [cookware sydney] on google.com.au and knowledge panel 2:31:12 – Can anyone tell me how to do an IIS redirect? 2:36:42 – I want to remove a sub-domain from serps. 2:44:27 – What are some other features do you believe Google + needs 2:45:48 – Part II: Seen and read and …
Cutting-Edge Link Building in Post-Penguin SEO World
China Tightens Rules on Internet Use
From VOA Learning English, this is the Technology Report in Special English. China has new rules that require people to use their real names when registering for Internet services. The rules also require Internet companies operating in China to remove material said to be objectionable. Chinese lawmakers approved the measures on December 28th, at the end of a five-day meeting of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress. The new rules say network service providers must “strengthen management of information released by users.” The providers have been ordered to stop the spread of banned information, and to deal with the problem. The Xinhua news agency says those steps include removing the information from the Internet and reporting it to the government.Chinese officials say the rules are aimed at protecting the personal information and stopping abuses like junk e-mail. But, critics say real-name registration will discourage individuals from reporting corruption and official abuses because they are afraid of possible action against them. The new Internet regulations go into effect as the Chinese government campaigns against virtual private networks, or VPNs. Some reports say the government is increasing its effort to block VPNs. Duncan Clark is an adviser to Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business. He says there is often an increase in Internet censorship during sensitive events like the recent 18th Communist Party Congress, which named China’s new …