I wonder about <noscript> tag. It isn't visible for user with enable javascript. Do search engines read this? Doeas it have any value? Recently I've added some links with misspellings to one of sites I take care for. I hope it won't be recognized as spam.
Since three month I've been looking for rankings for particualr Polish phrase. For one of them - "projekty domów" (eng. projects (plans) of houses) - best rankings are owned by pages which is one big, primitive spam, I mean doorwaypage with invisible text (<BODY bgcolor = text). There is also primitive redirect (location.href). These page has link popularity builded by links hidden in doorway pages and <noscript> tag, which belong to financial service with PR=5. How it is posible, that such page is well ranked in Google??
Franckey from Poland
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<noscript></noscript> Spam?
Started by
franckey
, Oct 08 2003 09:06 AM
4 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 08 October 2003 - 09:06 AM
#2
Posted 08 October 2003 - 09:09 AM
Welcome, Franckey! 
The search engines do read the info in the noscript tag, and it's very useful when you have javascript links and things like that which the search engines can't read. You simply put your links into the noscript tag and they can then follow them.
You shouldn't use it for anything that is not already on the page, or you are essentially hiding text which is something the search engines frown upon. Although it probably would work fine, as you've noticed on the other pages.
Spam is spam, regardless of whether it is detected or not.
Jill
The search engines do read the info in the noscript tag, and it's very useful when you have javascript links and things like that which the search engines can't read. You simply put your links into the noscript tag and they can then follow them.
You shouldn't use it for anything that is not already on the page, or you are essentially hiding text which is something the search engines frown upon. Although it probably would work fine, as you've noticed on the other pages.
Spam is spam, regardless of whether it is detected or not.
Jill
#3
Posted 08 October 2003 - 11:26 AM
Same thoughts apply to text in <noframes> presumably, Jill?
#4
Posted 08 October 2003 - 12:16 PM
Invisible text spam is invisible text spam, whether it is same-colour-as-background, div tag, attribute text, noscript, noframes or whatever. The principle is the same.
How NOSCRIPT should be used
How NOFRAMES should be used
How NOSCRIPT should be used
How NOFRAMES should be used
#5
Posted 08 October 2003 - 12:31 PM
Of course, how could it be otherwise?Same thoughts apply to text in <noframes> presumably, Jill?
Jill
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