Fairfax
Digital, the owner of RSVP, the biggest
online dating site in Australia,
seems to be using dubious SEO tactics to manipulate Google search results to
attract more traffic to its site.
Using Hitwise data we can see that RSVP attracted,
on average, 3.3 million visits a month over December 2006 and January 2007. Our
3loves site attracted on average 49,778
visits a month over the same two months while all online dating sites attracted
on average 20.79 million visits a month. RSVP has 15.8% share of traffic in the
online dating category. We have 1.5% of RSVPs traffic.
These stats make the
RSVP behaviour all the more curious. Here's what we know so far.
Fairfax Digital uses
an organisation called Commission
Monster to promote RSVP and, we suspect, other Fairfax Digital sites. We
discovered this by tracking redirection from a Google search results link
through to where we actually ended up. We were taken through Commission Monster
on the way to the page we were seeking through Google.
Someone, we suspect
Commission Monster, has created a page which redirects traffic to RSVP when
they have been searching for 3LOVES. This is a violation of Google rules. Click
here
to see what Google thinks is at the page. This is what the Google spider cached
on January 30 this year. Curiously, the page has been modified in the last 24
hours, since we first raised this issue, and is now displaying an error.
Until yesterday, the
page seemed to check where the click came from and if it was not Google, the
browser redirected to RSVP. We know from Google results and what's in their
cache that the Google spider was not redirected.
Here is the
Google cache for the page as captured by us today. This is evidence of misbehavior.
Fairfax / RSVP
actions over the last 24 hours show they know they have been caught out. Expect
the Google cached page to change as they try and remove traces of their Google
search results manipulation.
That Fairfax and or
their representatives have changed the redirect page in the last 24 hours is
proof to us that they know they have done something wrong.
Even though it does
not actually exist. Browsers clicking on the Google search results are taken
through what is called a 302 redirect to RSVP. Whoever set this up did so to
take people searching for 3LOVES to RSVP.
Whoever has done this
has gone to considerable lengths to try and trick the Google spider. BMW did
something similar and were removed from Google for a time as a result. Details
of what BMW did and the consequences can be read here. Google
gave BMW a pagerank 0 penalty,
meaning that they lose all relevancy in Google searches. It's kind of like
being sent to Siberia in Winter for a while.
Google takes attempts to manipulate search results very seriously as the purity
of results is crucial to their credibility and business model.
We know from our
research that Fairfax Digital is not only targeting our 3LOVES site in this
way. We have plenty of other dating site names being used to drive traffic to
RSVP in this way. Here
is the cached page setup for Adultmatchmaker.
We have reported the
matter to Google. They came back to us quickly and have sought additional
information which we are providing.
Google's webmaster
guidelines cover this issue. Specifically, Google advises webmasters: Don't employ cloaking or sneaky redirects.
They go on to say: If a site
doesn't meet our quality guidelines, it may be blocked from the index.
This is why we are putting it to Google that RSVP is removed from the Google
index.
3LOVES is a tiny free
online dating site. We’re new, we’re under-resourced and we are filling a need
in the community. People are spending too much chasing love online. Tens of
millions of dollars are spent each year by Australians chasing love and romance
online. If we can save even a fraction o that for people to use elsewhere in
their lives than our mission will be accomplished.
The folks at Fairfax
Digital and RSVP ought to get a grip and focus on their offering rather than
try and con people searching for us into visiting their RSVP site.