Hello guys, in doing an analysis of our website using SEMRush, we discovered that there are Form Type links from some of the business websites connected to our website with follow attributes. SEMRush has identified them as toxic backlinks. What is the proper HTML code structure for setting Form Type links with nofollow attributes?
- Home
- Lovingly
Latest posts made by Lovingly
-
How to make Form Type Links have "Nofollow" attributes
-
RE: Is this cloaking or some dangerous blackhat SEO tactic?
Thanks for your response Hutch42. I know what meta descriptions are, their purpose and how they can best be used to enhance click-through-rates. Something changed on the Guess site since yesterday when we were analyzing it, so my initial post is now proving irrelevant.
Here is another question: Apart from a page's official description tag, Google will usually pull text from a particular page and use it as part of a description on a SERPS depending on the keywords used in search. The text it pulls from that page may not necessarily be that page's official description tag. Is there way (or would you advise), to add let's say a 200-word article about a business on a page in an invisible manner, while still having Google display any part of that article in a SERPS if any search includes keywords that have been used in that article? So basically, the text is in the back end (not visible on the page), maybe in the html code, but Google can still pick it up and add it's content as an unofficial description in a SERPs if a search contains one of more keywords included in the article?
I hope you understand what I'm asking. Thanks
-
Is this cloaking or some dangerous blackhat SEO tactic?
Hey wonderful SEO guys, I need your advice. Would the following be considered cloaking, or a black hat SEO tactic.
I performed the following search for Guess tops on Google: "Guess women's tops." Please see the attached image (Guess 1) of the description tag that comes up with this search. This not the primary page description tag, but when you visit the women's tops tag, that description is not visible on the page. In fact it is placed in the meta name section (see Guess meta-name description image). The information appears as a description on a SERPS depending on the keyword search performed, but the text is just not visible on the tops page.
Can this be considered a form of cloaking? If not, is this a dangerous blackhat SEO tactic, or actually nothing to be worried about? We are thinking of doing something similar with some of lengthy homepage introductions-making them invisible, but still appearing on SERPS, as long as it relates to content that is clearly on the website, or what the website is about.
Please advise. Thanks.
Looks like your connection to Moz was lost, please wait while we try to reconnect.