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John Chow, earlier last month, discovered the hard way that "spam" is relative on Digg, and quite frankly, that Digg has an absolute lazy "web2.0" way of determining this.
Hope you don't mind, but I chronicled the whole event over here --> http://www.deepjiveinterests.com/2006/11/26/joh...>
They let their users determine it for them.
More than getting people to complain a site is "spam", there is potential way to get it done automatically -- and that is to submit a certain # of submissions for a URL, let's say NYTimes.com, and then create sockpuppet accounts to bury them.
Bury enough of them, and it will trigger an automatic ban of a URL ... and as you've already figured out, trying to unban is very difficult.
Because 'banning' and 'spamming' is entirely relative, and open up to extreme abuse to people with agendas, I would say its even more dangerous than "gaming" to the FP -- as it looks like its a way for people to 'censor' certain sites they just don't like.
But you've already talked bout that. ;)
Cheers,
t @ dji
Apparently I've been a bit too optimistic. There are so many good things happening with digg, it's a sad reminder that despite the pretty wrapper, some things are rotten inside.
The funny thing is that our social bookmark tool which includes a link to digg is in use by over 50,000 blogs. The amount of traffic/links that has created for digg's benefit is not trivial.
Thank you for your kind words!
http://www.seoyak.com
Rex
Am I the only one who thinks that Digg must be the place where all the DMOZ editors went? Aren't power trips great? ;)
If you weren't submitting your stories just to get the bump in page views, then why do you CARE if you can't submit it to Digg?
Do you really think your still blogs are so informative that everyone should be reading them? No. You just want the page view increase that Digg gives. In other words, you WANT to use Digg for your own financial gain.
The very fact that you complain makes you hypocrites. And stupid quite frankly. If your juveilne diaries are not good enough to be financially sound WITHOUT spamming Digg, then you need to find a real job.
This blog will get it's little 25-30k unique visitors with or without digg. That's not the issue.
The issue for me is when people try to submit a story they want to share with the digg community and get an error message "This domain name is banned from submissions" it sends an inaccurate message.
My complaint is not about being off of digg, its about someone else making that decision arbitrarily and digg support acting very much like DMOZ. And we all know where DMOZ ended up.
Unless your content makes it to the homepage at digg, it's unlikely that it will be discovered because their search and social mechanisms are below par.
Searchles doesn't ban domain names unless they are truly objectionable - i.e. porn. But our algorithms and platform are structured to reward users who are on the site to interact intelligently around content.
i.e. we had a guy yesterday posting links to ringtones like crazy but because he has not created a ringtone "group" and affiliated them with the group, (and no one else seems to be particularly interested in ringtones) his content is less likely to be discovered on the site or impact results at other search engines. On the other hand, users that affiliate their content with appropriate groups and tag it appropriately are finding that its easier to reach and collaborate with their target audience not only at Searchles but elsewhere. For example, a group I created on Identity Theft Legislation as a resource for a reporter friend who was writing an article on the subject is now the top result at google when you search for "identity theft legislation" and "bennett."
You and your audience clearly want to have an intelligent conversation on SEO issues and track/access the best content on the subject. We have several groups at Searchles dedicated to Search and SEO issues (some better than others). We would welcome your participation in these groups and any feedback on how we can improve.
PS - sorry for the elevator pitch but I thought you might find it useful based on your objectives and complaint about digg. Happy holidays!
How can anyone protect their reputable, newsworthy sites from having this happen to them. Its like a bunch of Digg Nazis or something "No Digg For You!" :(
What they did to TopRank is just wrong, wrong, wrong!
I do wonder a bit though, if it's a symptom of growing pains or if they really think the current editorial and exclusion policy is the best way to go.
Thank you for your very kind comments on Search Engine Gurus!
Pierre
I really don't support that weird domain banning thing.
It sucks.
In fact it sucks just as the Adsense account banning policy of Google Adsense. They also kick small accounts with low volume while leaving some big spam scraper adsense sites operators in the program, just because they make enough of money...
Therefore I don't agree that Digg will just suffer itself from it's banning policy... it's just the same simple minded evil 100% or not evil 100% ( do I hear black or white seo ) that Google propagates...
and obviously Google is doing good with that policy, altough I don't think it's right and hurts the wrong people - sometimes...
best regards & merry xmas
christoph
http://paulamooney.blogspot.com/2006/12/i-was-b...
I haven't been going to digg much since my ip got banned :P
I was one of the people who checked out spike the vote before it was sold to a friend of digg :)
LOL
G-Man
Just wanted you to know I posted about this today in the LED (issue #2317). Hey, if *this* blog can be banned, then any site any time can be banned by catering to the "wrong" demographic.
Cheers!
As if you need them... :-)
When I heard they banned you and SitePoint and not me, it's clear that they have huge problems with their procedures and policies.
If it were me, I would first try to contact the management of Digg and explain to them what is happening. This would be as a courtesy and not because it's really hurting your business. If this leads nowhere then I would issue a press release and tell the entire, documented story. Not because you need to, but because it would help all the small SEOs and anyone else targeted.
I don't care about Digg one way or another, but I can't just sit by when I hear about misuse of power or screwed up systems that hurt people.
I am willing to donate to this cause, just let me know. I just read about this issue in LED Digest (http://www.led-digest.com). I'm going to go see if I can find some contact information over at Digg... :-)
I might email digg again, but right now my focus is on our clients, training our team and trying to keep things interesting on this blog.
Cheers! :)
I've read enough posts by now suggesting that Diggs policies are tough on SEOs (in particular) and other sites deemed unworthy by the Digg audience.
Can I suggest that all the SEOs talking about marketing on Digg should switch to talking about Reddit or Stumbleupon and create a bit of buzz for those communities? Sure, Digg may create a tsunami of traffic initially, but I'd sacrifice the Digg pack for a more mature audience any day.
That's nothing against Kevin Rose and Digg - I think he's achieved a phenomenal thing with Digg. But the Digg audience are sending out a clear message and maybe SEOs and pro-bloggers should take the hint.
The digg community is as fickle as they get and if that's the kind of audience a marketer wants to reach, then I say go for it. Otherwise, there are plenty of other ways to attract high quality traffic and links with attractive effort to results ratios.
If you're interested, we'd love to add you to our growing list.
Rick
When I tried to submit an article for the first time, I got the "spam" error message.
Netsons is a free web hosting service, very popular in Italy. Like Altervista does, every user has an URL like username.netsons.org.
I've discovered that the WHOLE domain, including everyone's account, is banned (not only mine). Digg spam policy really sucks... :(
(sorry for my bad English)
To get a start looking at this please check out this post on my blog:
Thanks
~Becky
What an unfortunate sequence of events!
I find your posts to be of value and educational and the apparent action reflects fear-based thinking.
I am going to elect and believe your blog will only get stronger with more followers because of this situation.
I used to like them but now I really really don't.
BTW, the traffic was incredible maybe that's what someone didn't like...
A few years ago, someone posted a piece to Digg which mentioned an item that we sell, called the Metal Pen. Maybe it was a quiet days for news (it was December 24th!) but it did get a lot of discussion, and we certainly saw an increase in traffic and sales. As I say, this post was nothing to do with me. To be brutally honest, I had not heard of them before this happened.
Remembering the good effect that other person's post had for us, I thought I would try to post a story myself about a new item that we have just got, which I think is really amazing. However I discovered that the whole www.grand-illusions.com domain is banned. Initially it said that we hosted adult content (which is not true). Then the support people said that it was a spam issue.
All I can say is that, before this week, I have never posted anything to Digg. So this all seems to have come about due to the action of others.
Sorry for the long post.
Hendrik