Nofollow, do you follow?
Google introduced the concept for the specification of the attribute value nofollow in the year 2005. When a nofollow attribute is included in a link, it is actually telling the search engine spiders not to index the page the link is pointing to. An example of how the attribute rel=”nofollow” is included in the link is shown here.
<a href=”http://www.mydomain.com/” rel=”nofollow”>an example</a>
The site that the link is pointing to will not be penalized in any way but it will not gain in PageRank because the search engine spiders will regard the link as irrelevant and will not index the page.
Since its introduction, a number of blog software makers such as Wordpress, Blogger, Six Apart, LiveJournal, MSN Space have adopted it. Nofollow attribute is good in a way that it helps to prevent spammer from getting credits for their spam links which they leave at every blog comments that they can lay their hands on. They may get some curious visitors who may click on their links but the links will not improve their PageRank.
Google’s action on paid links has stepped on the toes of many and some argued that Google PageRank has actually damaged the web. It uses inbound links as a factor in weighting the search results and that has led many to optimize for that system and even game it. According to Google, this inevitable and now to cover the damaged done they introduced the nofollow attribute. Is rel=nofollow able to rectify the problem? Your guess is as good as mine.
It looks like they have no solutions to detect a paid link and now they are asking all webmasters to help to publish only quality links by including rel=nofollow in all paid links. The request comes with a warning, “If you don’t help us, you will be sorry!”
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