[ mordor @ 02.04.2005. 15:27 ] @
Dokument: http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacg...20050071741&RS=20050071741

Neke diskusije vezane za ovu temu:
http://forums.seochat.com/t27478/s.html
http://forums.searchenginewatch.com/showthread.php?t=4978

Summary svega: http://socengine.com/seo/guide/google-historical-data-patent.html


Mnogo korisnih informacija, vecina nije nista novo ali postoji par stvari koje malo bolje objasnjavaju sandbox.
Naravno kao i svaki doc na ovu temu i od ovoga me malo hvata strah, zasto zakljucite sami.

[Ovu poruku je menjao Gojko Vujovic dana 02.04.2005. u 16:38 GMT+1]

[Ovu poruku je menjao mordor dana 02.04.2005. u 16:53 GMT+1]
[ mordor @ 02.04.2005. 15:37 ] @
Extra zanimljive stvari:

3. Google may determine how old each of the pages on a given website is and then determine the average age of pages on the website as a whole. The difference between a specific page's age and the average age of all documents on the site will be used in the ranking score.
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5. One methodology of discovering site age might include when Google first "discovered" - read spiders the site, when Google first finds a link to the site, and when the site contains a "predetermined number of pages". I interpret this to mean that Google has some kind of threshold for site size (number of pages) that when reached, triggers a scoring effect (probably positive).
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7. The "frequency at which the content changes" will be determined by the average time between changes, the number of changes over a particular time period, and the rate of change of one time period vs. the rate of change for another time period. So, if you are updating your website every day, then switch to updating once a week, your scoring in the historical measurements at Google will shift.
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Click-Through Rate Data

15. The "history data" from #1 could include information on "how often the document is selected when the document is included in a set of search results". This is literally tracking clickthroughs and rewarding those sites with higher CTR - just like AdSense does. Google will be scoring based on the "extent to which the document is selected over time... when included in a set of search results". We always assumed this to be true, but this is the first hard evidence I've seen directly from the horse's mouth.

16. Google may assign a "higher score" when the document is selected more often. No-brainer.

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34. Traffic characteristics associated with a page/site may be taken into account in scoring.

i jos dosta stvari stvarno lepo stivo
[ boccio @ 02.04.2005. 16:35 ] @
zezanje...guglova klasicna prica, bogati jos bogatiji, siromasni jos siromasniji.

Originalni dokument je malo tezak za citanje, pa cu to ostaviti za neki dan kad budem imao dovoljno cigareta i kafe pri ruci... :)

Ono sto na prvi pogled vidim, posebno gledajuci sive/crne/jos crnje komentare sa seochat-a je da smo opet naj*bali, naravno osim srecnika koji imaju odvratno visok CTR na pretragama...

ne znam, mukica me hvata...