Listly by briannadittmer
I recently wrote about the new canonical negative SEO discovered by Bill Hartzer of Hartzer Consulting. It is a way of redirecting penalty from one site to another. To recall, Hartzer states that the new canonical negative SEO works in three steps: first, the negative SEO site copies the head of the victim site on…
There have been three major flaws and exploits of the Google search algorithms recently, and they all involve negative SEO. The problem is that all of these three exploits in Google's organic search algorithms allows others to attack a website, causing severe search engine ranking drops, and a loss of business.
A new negative SEO attack method has been discovered. What makes this exploit especially bad is that it is virtually impossible to detect the attacker.
In an ideal world, there would only be one version of each page. Too bad the world is messy and the same content can exist at multiple locations on the same website and other websites. Years ago, a solution was adopted to help with these duplicate content issues: the “canonical link element,” better known as a “rel=canonical” or “canonical tag.”
Here are 7 ways your site could be hacked or negatively attacked. Unfortunately these attacks can impact upon your SEO and business online.
An in-depth look at the most common negative SEO tactics, how to detect them, and how to fight back to recover your rankings.
In the past month I have been doing quite a few SEO Evaluations and technical audits of websites, and I have really enjoyed it, after working as Head of Search for quite a while, I am genuinely loving getting back to doing more of the actual SEO work. The technical analysis, the digging into a sites link authority and even keyword and competitor research. In general I’m loving figuring out how a site is doing in the SERPs, why they’re not ranking well and how it can be improved. This is why I love SEO after all, it’s like a riddle or a puzzle, and I just got to figure it out =)