Panda is now closer to real time.

Where are we going? It’s charming, but not beautiful.

When Panda 4.1 launched on September 23, 2014, I immediately disliked the update’s title and version number. Danny Sullivan named it 4.1, so it stuck. But to me, that wasn’t 4.1… not even close. It was more like 4.75. You see, there have been multiple Panda shakeups and updates since P4.0 on May 20, 2014.

A based on accessing a large amount of Panda middle east mobile number list data (across sites, categories, and countries) Google can develop an algorithm, analyze the SERPs, refine the algorithm to get the desired results, and push it out. And that’s exactly what I was seeing (again, almost weekly since Panda 4.0).

 

When pandas and penguins meet in real time…

…they’ll have a cup of coffee and laugh at us. 🙂 So, since Panda is near real-time, there’s going to be a crossover of major algorithm updates. And we  collaborate with an seo specialist just had a major experiment with Penguin, Pirate, and Panda on October 24th. But it could (and probably will) be a lot more chaotic than we’ve had. We’re rapidly approaching a time where major algorithm updates developed in the lab will be released to the web in near real-time or real-time.

And if organic search traffic from Google is important to you, pay attention. We’re about to take a quick trip into the future of Google and SEO. And after hearing what I have to say, you’re probably longing for the past…

 

Google’s brilliant object-oriented approach to fighting web spam

I have presented about Panda, Penguin, and other miscellaneous disruptions in the Force at the last two SES conferences. More on these “other disruptions” soon. In my presentation, one of my slides looks like this:

 

For the past several years, Google has been using a brilliant, object-oriented approach to fighting web spam and low-quality content. Webspam engineers christmas island businesses directory  can develop external algorithms in a lab and then inject them into the real-time algorithm whenever they want. This is brilliant because it isolates specific problems, while also being highly scalable. And by the way, it should be afraid of anyone who breaks the rules.

For example, we have Panda, Penguin, Pirate, and Fold above. Each was developed to target a specific problem and can be unleashed on the web whenever Google wants. Sure, there are undoubtedly connections between them (direct or indirect), but each specific algorithm is its own black box. Again, it’s object-oriented.

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