Work at Home and Make Money Online - Best Home Business YouTube

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Added: April 9, 2009
Big Publishers Want Special Treatment from Google
Update: In an interesting turn to this story, the New York Times has eliminated 993,000 article pages as it rolls International Herald Tribune (IHT) into the NYT site. Instead of redirecting the articles to the same article on NYT, they all simply go now to one landing page.
Ryan Tate at Valleywag writes, "The Times' longtime online chief, Martin Niesenholtz, recently whined that a Google search on the word 'Gaza' didn't include any of his content on the first results page. And yet he just nuked 121,000 of his own articles containing that keyword."
Original article: Big-brand publishers don't like being overshadowed by bloggers. What else is new?
A new AdAge article discusses a group of such publishers (including brands like the Wall Street Journal, ESPN, and the New York Times) which make up Google's Publishing Advisory Board, which is calling for Google to rank their content higher because they're "the original sources" of news stories. Of course we all know that while that may often be the case, it is also very often not. Somtimes even "original sources" even come from MicroBlogging. Remember when the news of the emergency landing on the Hudson River broke on Twitter?

This is not a new discussion. As Steve Rubel says, when he read the article he felt like he had stepped back into 2004.
The truth of the matter is, many big brand publishers have become more blog-like and many bloggers and blog-style news sites have become big brands themselves. Rubel phrases it well, "To me, we don't have zebras and elephants anymore. They have mated and we're all one species."
But that's not how some of these publishers see it. They'd rather get special treatment based on their own brand rather than putting forth the effort in search engine optimization that others would when they weren't ranking to their satisfaction. Matt McGee (who has also joined this particular discussion) recently looked at a study showing that the Fortune 500 is still "largely invisible" in natural search results.
So where does Google stand? A recent update did supposedly cater to bigger brands anyway. "There's absolutely value to original content," AdAge quotes a Google Spokesperson. "There's value to derivative content, too. We look at this in many ways from the point of view of the user. But the truth is there are so many shades of gray even within, quote, original content."
The big-brand publishers are awaiting a more concrete answer from Google. The council meets again on April 30. With so much gray, that answer is probably going to be hard to reach.
Where do you stand on this subject? Talk about it with WPN readers.
Creating YOU, Inc.

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Added: April 9, 2009
Pingdom Names Most Reliable Blogging Services
Running a blog can be a big nuisance; you've got keep up with current events, write posts, and monitor comments on at least a daily basis. But new Pingdom statistics should lighten the load by helping people make sure their blogs remain accessible.
Pingdom observed nine different Blogging services for a period of four months in order to find out which ones suffered the least amount of downtime. The uptime-monitoring company's test ran through March 10th, so its findings should be quite current.
TypePad came out on top, spending just 14 minutes in non-working order. Blogger and WordPress.com were next, with both services losing 20 minutes. Then there was a significant drop-off, as Windows Live Spaces, Blogster, and Squarespace experienced 250, 279, and 313 minutes' worth of downtime, respectively.
Vox, LiveJournal, and Blog.com wrap up the list with performances too bad to bother reporting.
So there's some significant (and even potentially valuable) data for all the bloggers out there. If you're using one of the less reliable services, consider making a switch and testing what sort of effect the move has on your readership and ad revenue.
Six Apart Reveals the Laws of Motion
Six Apart, the company behind the popular Movable Type Blogging platform recently introduced a free social application for use with that platform. Now, they have posted the "laws" of this application. Those are:
- The biggest online social network is the Internet itself.
- Today's mainstream social networks are like yesterday's mainstream media.
- Reveal the community you already have.
- Your social network belongs under your control.
- Your community should start with half a billion members.
- The web is in Motion.
"We believe that the right strategy for connecting your blog or site to the world of social networking is not to select one particular social network to hold all the cards, but to connect to all of the powerful and vibrant social networks across the web," says Six Apart Chief Evangelist Anil Dash.
We've recently seen other big data portability services come to the forefront like Google Friend Connect and Facebook Connect. Motion has a similar function, but is open to more services, kind of like Meebo does for instant messaging.
"There's never been an application like this, which supports the half a billion individual accounts across these services, allowing almost anyone on the web to comment on or favorite your content without having to register to create an account," says Dash.
I think the first of Six Apart's laws sums it pretty nicely. The Internet is the biggest social network, and we're just seeing more companies allow the connection between big parts of it, so it all becomes inevitably more connected altogether. It's going to be an interesting year for this kind of concept.