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Hotlinking Banners: Red Flag For Search Engines?
#1
Posted 22 December 2008 - 04:17 PM
<a href="http://www.EXAMPLE.c...i/default.aspx" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.EXAMPLE.c...0x80_white.gif" </a>
Looking forward to your thoughts on this.
#2
Posted 23 December 2008 - 04:11 PM
#3
Posted 23 December 2008 - 05:22 PM
Thank you for your reply. Indeed the Alt attribute is missing in the code I showed in my posting.
Regarding my question: just to be sure I think I will create a banner without a picture. It must be to obvious for search engines a banner picture coming from the same domain.
Best wishes
Rob
#4
Posted 24 December 2008 - 01:07 PM
#6
Posted 27 December 2008 - 09:50 AM
Of course you can do that.
But in your original post, you showed that it was an image:
col_banner120x80_white.gif
So I guess I'm still confused.
#7
Posted 28 December 2008 - 01:23 AM
But in your original post, you showed that it was an image:
col_banner120x80_white.gif
So I guess I'm still confused.
Hi Jill
Thank you for your reply.
You are right: in the original post is an image link. But if a banner without using a picture is still a banner is not the essence of my question: in stead of hotlinking the banner, I could also ask an affiliate to save the image locally and then link it to my site. I'm just wondering if SE grant less value to an inbound link if the banner is loaded from the save domain as it is linking to.
Best wishes
Rob
#8
Posted 28 December 2008 - 08:12 AM
I haven't seen any search engine engineers with that kind of resume running around any public forums. Ever. That's even out of Matt C's league! He'd have to ask someone and trust they'd answer his question correctly, and trust that the answer didn't change two weeks after he asked the question.
But seriously, why worry about it?
If you let yourself get to the level where you're that concerned about one type of link from one page or one site, your approaching link building from the wrong perspective. Essentially you end up wasting a lot of time and brain power on something that's totally out of your control and too fluid to be controlled anyway.
I've said it about a thousand times before and I'll say it again...
If you approach link building from an Advertising/Promotion/Marketing perspective, not an SEO one, you'll be a lot better off. In other words, concentrate on getting links that stand a chance of getting seen and clicked on by real people who might be interested in what you have to offer (aka Qualified Traffic) instead of links that may or may not pass some mystical SEO value.
Once you get yourself into this visitor centric mindset with your link building it all suddenly becomes a lot easier and the answers to dozens of questions you may have become a lot more clear.
#9
Posted 28 December 2008 - 09:40 AM
Do whatever is easiest for everyone.
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