August 9, 2007
Gaming Google - It Really Is That Easy…
I gave a talk at Web Design World in Seattle last month on Balancing Design, Usability & SEO. While doing some research on that presentation, I was trying to find some examples of sites that were strong in only one of these areas. As I’ve done some work in the printer ink space and knew there were plenty of well-optimized but really ugly and unusable sites there, I did a search on ‘ink cartridge’ and hit the jackpot on the first result.

This site was perfect for my needs: A #1 ranking for an insanely competitive keyword, ugly as hell, and horrifically unusable. Score!
Then I did a link: lookup command on Google to get a sense for the link pop this page has, certain that they must have engaged in some serious link-building to get this result. Little did I know…
As I scanned the results of the link query, I was struck by how many unrelated sites seemed to be linking to InkandStuff.

I figured they could be paid links, but many of the sites listed didn’t seem like the kind you would normally associate with posting paid links. So when I saw a listing for the World Islamic Forum Foundation, I clicked through to figure out why in the world this site was linking to InkandStuff. This is where things get interesting… because I couldn’t find a link on this page.

Now I was REALLY intrigued. Google was seeing the link, so it had to be there, right…? So I did a View Source to check out the code and figure out where the link was, and saw this:

What the…? Google is attributing link popularity to sites who have embedded invisible sponsored links in free stat counters? Apparently so… How else is this awful UK site ranking #1 on Google.com for “ink cartridge”?
So next I figured I’d check out MyWebStats to see what they were all about. Sure enough, on their FAQ page they state:
“If this service is so good, how can it be free?
We are lucky to have sponsors who cover the complete cost of running this service. To show our appreciation we accompany your counter with a small link to one of these sponsors.”
“To show our appreciation” - I love that.
SO - That apparently is the secret to gaming Google. All of Google’s tough talk about paid links and how they’re so proactive about making sure people can’t spam their way to the top is apparently just that - talk. This should be SO easy for Google to detect and act upon, but they haven’t… If they had, InkandStuff and/or MyWebStats would’ve been penalized, right?
I was one of those people who looked down on buying links for a long time. It just seemed wrong - and surely the brain trust at Google would clamp down at some point. I just couldn’t believe that buying your way to the top of the organic results could A) be SO easy, or B) yield sustainable results. That was three years ago.
This scheme of embedding links in free stat counters in order to juice link pop has been around for at least that long - and should be among the easiest for Google to detect. It should be a big yellow flag when a site gets lots of inbound links from totally unrelated sites over a short time period. And it should be really easy to detect the code pattern like the one shown above for those inbound links (it even says “invisible” for God’s sake!). Finally, it is pretty irregular to have a UK page show up at the top of the results for a competitive term like this on Google.com. It seems like that might have thrown a flag somewhere along the line as well. The patterns are easy to spot. But Google is either oblivious to all of these issues or they’ve decided not to do anything about it. I’m not sure which is worse.
People will point out that Google may already be aware of this and not be flowing PageRank from these links, per Matt Cutt’s post here. And maybe InkandStuff has enough link pop from other sources that are driving them to the #1 spot for “ink cartridge.” But I really doubt it. And that argument misses the point. InkandStuff is clearly trying to game Google with this and other activities - and they are doing so quite successfully - to the detriment of searchers and their less-savvy competitors. Bottom line: Google is letting these guys blatantly spam their engine and get away with it.
Rand Fishkin at SEOMoz (on whom one of my team members has what she calls an “SEO crush”) wrote an excellent post on this topic a while back: Paid Links - Can’t Be a White Hat With ‘em, Can’t Rank Without ‘em. (Rand - If you want to know the identity of your secret admirer, slip me a $20 while we’re on stage at SES. Just my way of trying to spice up the otherwise sedate SEM Pricing Models discussion)
But I digress…
It makes it really hard to be white hat SEO practitioners when we see things like this happening. Sadly, this is the second time I’ve run across this exact same scenario (an invisible sponsored link embedded within a different free stat counter) in the past few months while trying to figure out why a really crappy site was ranking so well for a competitive term. So count me among the growing legions of grey hats now, I guess… Given the competitive environment and the fact that “everyone is doing it” now - and it’s working - it no longer serves my clients’ best interests to advise against buying links. I hate saying that, but don’t feel like I have a choice any more. It’s the price of entry if you want top rankings on any competitive terms these days.
I happen to be a big fan and promoter of Google’s. But they risk killing (or at least injuring) the goose that laid their big golden egg if they don’t get more serious about cleaning up their results. Granted much of this may be beyond their control. I don’t expect them to be able to singlehandedly solve this problem for good. But it seems like they could be putting up more of a fight and at least making someone have to work to game their engine. As is, it’s just too easy.
I’m going to report this as a paid link. But their bluster aside, I’m not going to hold my breath hoping it will do any good. I first saw this result two months ago, and as of today both the InkandStuff and MyWebStats sites show a PR6.










It’s very true … all the competitive SERPs are owned by sites buying links. Good reveal here, but not surprising.
It’s an area that makes Google appear hypocritical; preaching that white is best and then rewarding grey. If Google are doing anything to stop paid links why aren’t we hearing about it?
Or am I just not reading the right news?
Does reporting the site ever do any good?
I reported a competitor to Google, Yahoo, and MSN that had white keywords all down the side of his white page and not one of them has done anything about it.
That was about 2 months ago. Should I expect to wait longer or just forget about it?
That is a great find!!!
On your assumption (or my interpretation of it) that lots of unrelated links are paid links … I am not sure about !!
What if a hotel website is linked from the blogs of a whole team of scientists that just happen to have had a conference/meeting nearby, and actually happen to enjoy the services of the hotel …. should that be considered link spamming or unrelated or be viewed as paid links ? There are certainly exceptions, if you ask me.
On a different note I just wanted to point out that http://www.mywebstats.org/ is openly linking to inkandstuff.co.uk as its actually one of its 2 main sponsors …. whatever that means.
Lance, your experience with that black-hat link-building is discouraging, but all is not lost. For a start, each of us can promote free statistics programs that are white hat. For a small church website I developed last year, for example, the free StatCounter provides stats that are more useful that Google Analytics’, and it helps the site get top search ranking without any paid links or devious tactics.
Each of us with a free statistics counter can check for underhanded links embedded in the counter code. We can then get rid of such links and/or bring in an ethical counter.
Since you know Rand Fishkin, what about getting him to pick up on this? His SEOmoz blog attracts the big SEO guns, and no doubt it also brings in lots of us simple people who use free statistics counters. If this all plays out as it should, we’ll soon gather enough of us clean-livin’ folks to stand up to the outlaws and save the farm.
Bye.
(Gotta ride off into the sunset.)
Just because you see a URL returned for a link: command doesn’t mean its counting.
good research, many of the counter links are being banned. i have not seen this in the ink industry but I have seen it with some other very competitive keywords.
In fairness, I don’t know Rand. I know of him and respect him, but SES will be my first chance to actually meet him.
This takes on an additional level of complexity when clients read about this type of link-building and ask if it would work for them, or worse yet try it out for themselves without considering the recourse. In this example, if it sounds too good to be true, it’s not. But in general most sites will eventually get burned for this and other shady tactics.
It’s the same like ‘web design’ and finerdesign. What’s more, they didn’t buy links exactly; They put invisible links to their customers’ sites.
Google doesn’t care about it at all…