Pulkit Agrawal from Ahmedabad, India asks:
"Whenever Google detects a violation of its Webmaster Guidelines, can we expect a feature to be added in Google Webmaster Central where it could help the webmasters learn what the issue was?"
This video is part of a "Grab Bag" series in which Matt Cutts, head of Google's webspam team, answers questions from webmasters. We're not currently taking new video questions, so your best bet for getting an answer about webmaster-related search issues is to head to our help forum:
http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Webmasters?hl=en
Matt, please many of us work for ourselves and are barely making a living. The answers we understand have to be vague, but why cant we get an answer straight forward like YES we are building a bad link removal tool, or yes we know many of you are being bowled by your competition and we are NOT going to penalize you, or we will alert you on something important like that. Hacking is a great corporate term and such, but truthfully we need bread to eat. PPC is to costly for most of us Matt help us.
DadsonFireORG 2 years ago
you got that right. i think matt wants to be a tv personality or something.
BirminghamDan 2 years ago
The more SEO I have studied, the more I believe it comes down to attention to detail, know what matters, take a long term view and no shortcuts. Plus, make quality content that people will value instead of 'shortcut' spam that, like page latency, just slows us down and gets in the way.
LightningLewS 2 years ago 2
Google does not launch attacks, I promise! I was on the front page of the Wall Street Journal criticizing Google for not responding to my issue in click fraud. Although I still disagree with their response, they never... not once! penalized my site for the article.
I disagree with their response to click fraud which is in direct violation of their own mission statement, but they are a business and have created a way for millions of writers and community activists to monetize their information.
InsuranceSoftware 2 years ago 2
recently one of my pages got dropped off the serps which enjoyed about 100 page visits daily prior. however, the main page is still in the serps and as far as i can tell, the page is still in the index. this very page which showed up on the first page of google is now nowhere to be found. what happened and what the reasons are is unbeknown to me.
vivianrollins 2 years ago
does a name of a dog fall under the copyright law?
blueyesmatt 2 years ago
Hi,
I posted a question 4-6 weeks ago but haven't heard back as yet.
Thanks
musicmaza 2 years ago
Matt Cutts is not on Webmaster forum
I don't trust other guys
almightyvegeta87 2 years ago
This is a tiny step forward, although all such steps are welcome. It doesn't explain or justify "we won't tell the vast majority about their mistakes in case we notify the Bad Guys". This is not proportionate. See my blog post at Knowmysite for more details
ShapeShifter42 2 years ago
freek0, a big drop can easily be caused by things other than Goog punishments.
I can cite you clear cases (me for one) where folks lost thousands of $ due to the secrecy and lack of recourse, were not being penalized, but could not find out.
If there were a healthy search ecosystem, it wouldn't matter much since if any one engine dropped you it wouldnt be a biz-killer.
MS Does provide a 'Blocked' flag BTW.
Goog doesnt have to compete that way due to their size. I think Matt etc mean well
manfmnantucket 2 years ago