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  • Started 10 years ago by wallis

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  1. wallis
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    there's one big difference: with an SQL injection attack there is an outsider directly interacting with your system, perhaps malevolently. With Google, outsiders don't even enter data in, Google goes and gets it. We've got the shoe on the wrong foot, as my mother used to say.

    I understand what you're getting at, but you're way off the mark here: The magazine publishers are free to configure their magazines and the world UGGS Outlet around them in any way UGG Boots Clearance they wish. The newstand operator is responsible for what goes on inside his stand. If he's serving up junk, do we go blaming the rest of the world for the quality of his service?There's a difference between selling junk and selling something that's obviously criminal. If you walked into a store where every magazine had "VIAGRA 50% OFF. MAIL US YOUR MONEY". Do you honestly mean to tell me that the magazines in question were perfectly ok and it was the magazine vendor who did something wrong?It's good that you realize that it's humans that are committing crimes, and not subhuman beings. But they're not the ones actually committing the crime.

    You seem to be ignoring the fact that these sites are selling fake merchandise or downright stealing people's money. White gray black hat SEO is not the point, I think you're conflating the nuts and bolts aspect of this article with the general geek indignation about UGG Boots Clearance Outlet Google's plummeting search results; but the latter is a tempest in a teapot despite there being a very vocal minority within hacker circles brandishing a fuming vitriolic hatred of spammers of all types, not too many people really believe there's anything criminal about SEO per se.

    Google created an ecosystem, spammers take steps that are criminal in this particular ecosystem and work against it's 'citizens'. Maybe their actions are not criminal in general terms, but it's at least scammy (not to say worse) when you look at it considering only this narrow subject (getting information through the internet). Google needs to do a better job, yes, just like lawmakers need to do it IRL, but it doesn't change the fact that IRL also mostly criminals are the ones that force the law system to adjust. Your post makes a lot of sense, but IMO there's nothing wrong in blaming spammers for the current situation.

    What if I'm trying to find a sports geek's blog post about the history of NFL jerseys, or something like that? My personal problem with all the search engines is that legitimately interesting/useful amateur content, or even things like mainstream news articles, gets lost in a sea of sites that are trying to sell me stuff when my query could be construed as even remotely commercial. Unfortunately this is a trend I don't see changing, because (a) the hawkers have more expertise and resources than the bloggers when it comes to SEO, and (b) the search engine itself benefits financially by assuming I want to buy things and showing results accordingly (especially if it's Google due to AdSense).How rapidly has your RSD progressed

    They are seeing VERy rapid progression with

    Posted 10 years ago #

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