Post by account_disabled on Feb 12, 2024 10:22:00 GMT
For each site (including penalized and control sites), We obtained historical link data for the previous and subsequent months. Analytical results: Using simple regression models, we identified patterns among penalized sites that differed significantly from control sites. Will webmasters remove bad links? After updating, bad links must be identified and removed, or at least disavowed. While we can't measure rejection data, we can easily measure link acquisition data. So, do webmasters generally follow the expectation of removing links after a penalty.
Aggressive link removal: As expected, aggressive link removal seems Botswana Email List to be a common response from Penguin. However, we must be careful with the statistics to ensure we are properly checking the extent and frequency of link removal. After that, the control group's root linking domains increased by an average of 10,000 domains, but this is best explained by the fact that some of the larger sites added links. Looking at the average link ratio, only about 10% of the control sites actually saw an increase in links in the three months following the Penguin incident.
The penalized website has one less root linking domain. However, this statistic is again affected by the size of the link graph of each penalized site. of those punished still saw an increase in links three months after the Penguin incident. Thus, roughly unaffected domains have more root domains three months after the penalty, while only penalized domains have more root domains three months later. Notice how small the difference is here. The reactions of webmasters only differed depending on whether they were penalized or not.
Aggressive link removal: As expected, aggressive link removal seems Botswana Email List to be a common response from Penguin. However, we must be careful with the statistics to ensure we are properly checking the extent and frequency of link removal. After that, the control group's root linking domains increased by an average of 10,000 domains, but this is best explained by the fact that some of the larger sites added links. Looking at the average link ratio, only about 10% of the control sites actually saw an increase in links in the three months following the Penguin incident.
The penalized website has one less root linking domain. However, this statistic is again affected by the size of the link graph of each penalized site. of those punished still saw an increase in links three months after the Penguin incident. Thus, roughly unaffected domains have more root domains three months after the penalty, while only penalized domains have more root domains three months later. Notice how small the difference is here. The reactions of webmasters only differed depending on whether they were penalized or not.