Post by taslima on Feb 14, 2024 8:58:53 GMT
ALGORITHM UPDATES November 2011 – Panda Update 3.1 See the Panda section below for more details. November 2011 – Freshness Update To give users the freshest, most recent search results, Google announced that it would be improving its ranking algorithm to prioritize freshness for certain queries. Google said it “noticeably impacts six to 10 percent of searches, depending on the language and domain you’re searching on.” October 2011 – Panda Update 3.0 See the Panda section below for more details. September 2011 – Panda Update 2.5 See the Panda section below for more details. August 2011 – Panda Update 2.4 See the Panda section below for more details. July 2011 – Panda Update 2.3 See the Panda section below for more details.
June 2011 – Panda Update 2.2 See the Panda section below for more details. May 2011 – Panda Update 2.1 See the Panda section below for more details. April 2011 – Panda Update 2.0 See the Panda section below for Denmark Email List more details. February 2011 – Panda Quality Update Google announced on its official blog that a new update to reduce rankings for low-quality content had been introduced. Dubbed “Panda,” it took particular aim at content produced by so-called “content farms.” The initial rollout impacted about 12% of English queries. (You’ll find detailed history in the Panda Algorithm Update section below.) Hazards: Websites lost rankings if they had duplicate, plagiarized or thin content; user-generated spam; keyword stuffing. Winners: Original, high-quality, high-relevance content often gained rankings.
January 2011 – Attribution Update In an effort to reduce spam, Google updated its algorithm to better detect scrapers. Matt Cutts, Google’s head of webspam at the time, revealed the change on his personal blog, saying it was a “pretty targeted launch: slightly over 2% of queries change in some way, but less than half a percent of search results change enough that someone might really notice.” 2010 ALGORITHM UPDATES June 2010 – Caffeine Google completed a significant new web indexing system named Caffeine (originally announced in 2009). It enabled Google to speed up its search engine, as well as provide users with fresher content. Learn more: Google Caffeine 2 in 2010 Google Caffeine 1 in 2009 May 2010 – Land reported that at an industry event, Google had confirmed the so-called Mayday update. This update significantly reduced long-tail traffic for some sites. Learn more: Can You Give Us an Update on Rankings for Long-Tail Searches? Google Caffeine vs.
June 2011 – Panda Update 2.2 See the Panda section below for more details. May 2011 – Panda Update 2.1 See the Panda section below for more details. April 2011 – Panda Update 2.0 See the Panda section below for Denmark Email List more details. February 2011 – Panda Quality Update Google announced on its official blog that a new update to reduce rankings for low-quality content had been introduced. Dubbed “Panda,” it took particular aim at content produced by so-called “content farms.” The initial rollout impacted about 12% of English queries. (You’ll find detailed history in the Panda Algorithm Update section below.) Hazards: Websites lost rankings if they had duplicate, plagiarized or thin content; user-generated spam; keyword stuffing. Winners: Original, high-quality, high-relevance content often gained rankings.
January 2011 – Attribution Update In an effort to reduce spam, Google updated its algorithm to better detect scrapers. Matt Cutts, Google’s head of webspam at the time, revealed the change on his personal blog, saying it was a “pretty targeted launch: slightly over 2% of queries change in some way, but less than half a percent of search results change enough that someone might really notice.” 2010 ALGORITHM UPDATES June 2010 – Caffeine Google completed a significant new web indexing system named Caffeine (originally announced in 2009). It enabled Google to speed up its search engine, as well as provide users with fresher content. Learn more: Google Caffeine 2 in 2010 Google Caffeine 1 in 2009 May 2010 – Land reported that at an industry event, Google had confirmed the so-called Mayday update. This update significantly reduced long-tail traffic for some sites. Learn more: Can You Give Us an Update on Rankings for Long-Tail Searches? Google Caffeine vs.