Working Together Against Blog Spam

Working Together Against Blog Spam

  • Comments (366)

Our job is to provide the most relevant and useful results to a user’s search query.

Sounds easy.  But, unfortunately there’s a powerful financial incentive for a small subset of people to try to manipulate the results so their sites come up to the top – at the expense of our customers.

Fighting this web spam is one of the harder parts of our job.  Spammers are very creative people who evolve their techniques over time.  Over the past year, being the newbie to the search engine block, we have had to discover and combat all of the techniques that have been developed over the past 5 years.  Now, finally, we get to move forward!

One thorny source of spam that we’ve seen is people stuffing blogs with comments that include links back to their sites.  We have taken some steps to combat this – but we really wanted to find a way to put bloggers back in control.

I was excited to wake up this morning to an email from my long-time friend and college roommate who is currently an engineer working on search at Google.  Don’t worry Paul – I won’t blog any outrageous stories about our time at Princeton. :-)

Paul told me that Google is planning on announcing support for a <rel=”nofollow”> tag on individual <A> links.  Any link with this tag will indicate to a crawler it is not necessarily approved by this page and shouldn’t be followed nor contribute weight for ranking. Our Search Champs suggested this and it has been a part of our plans since, we think it’s a great idea.

I quickly circulated this around our hallway and also to the MSN Spaces team – and we got quick agreement from both teams.  Over the coming weeks, our MSNBot crawler will start respecting this new tag, and sometime after that MSN Spaces will start to support this as well (I expect Mike Torres and MC will have more details – the team has already made investments to help prevent blog spam to begin with). Cheers to Yahoo! and Six Apart for also supporting this movement.

This should be a good thing for search customers, bloggers and webmasters. Let us know if you agree (or not) either in our comments or in our wiki. We’ll be listening and learning.
 

Ken Moss
General Manager, MSN Search Dev & Test

 

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  • I do agree with this new option for website owners.

    I have yet to see how much it will help keep blog comment SPAM down but if everyone begins implementing it on their blogs it should have some positive impact.

    The other reason I like this feature is that website owners have more control over what search engines do when visiting their website.

    Good job guys!
  • Well, I've been pretty quiet lately[1]. One of those reasons is now public: Six Apart has announced in co-operation with Google, Yahoo, MSN Search and other blog vendors a joint anti-spam initiative based on the HTML link type rel="nofollow". The...
  • Thank you for setting this up.

    But how do folks like us who blog on dotnetjunkies take advantage of this? I can't be expected to add rel=nofollow in each link in the comments :-/
  • Remember that spammers are interested on people, not in search engines (i.e: mail spam).

    Regards
  • Just to help get the word out... Google will be adding a tool to fight comment spam on weblogs, by not including links from commenters in factoring their page rank. The idea is that if you get rid of the...
  • Jay Allen describes the new Movable Type 'nofollow' plugin. Is it just me, or is this a completely contrived 'solution' to the problem of comment spam? Now, "All links submitted by external users in comments and TrackBacks" will not be...
  • In the first cooperative move for nearly ten years, the major search engines have unveiled a new indexing command for web authors that they all recognize, one that they hope will help reduce the link and comment spam that...
  • While we wait for Google to post official notice of its support for the new nofollow attribute, Yahoo's already chimed in on its blog that it will do so as well. And apparently, the Google announcement may come here,...
  • Just back from dinner at 8:30PM on Tuesday, and I guess it's fair to say that the announcement has been made, except there is nothing on Google's weblog yet.
  • <p>It's nice to see a solution to some of the blog comment spam. It's annoying to read "nice site" when you're looking for others' insights on a post and it's even worse to endure the tedium of purging spam from a site.</p>
    <p>It's also nice to see the sw
  • According to a post on Google's Official blog, a new feature will be available to fight comment spammers. Adding a "rel=nofollow" attribute to hyperlinks will prevent spammer links from being harvested by search engines. According to the post major blog...
  • Thanks for willing to work together with your competition.
  • <p>Google, MSN and Yahoo! are teaming up to help bloggers fight comment spam, but they need your help. </p>
    <p>Comment spammers leave comments that link to their own sites because they are hoping to convince the search engines that their site is importan
  • Hey you know something, with all the high profile links this page will be getting, this page will be a prime target for spammers. Can the feature be implemented on this page first :)

    Is this the starting point for search engine standards?
  • The whirlwind leak, then announcement, followed by blog mentions, media coverage, then implementation by the major players (SixApart/Movable Type, Yahoo and MSN) that Google had developed a new tag to prevent comment spam on blogs really shows the power of...
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