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Spamdexing is computer jargon, a portmanteau of "spamming" and "indexing". It is also called search engine spamming and refers to the practice on the World Wide Web of deliberately modifying HTML pages to increase the chance of them being placed high on search engine relevancy lists. People who do this are called search engine spammers.
Search engines use a variety of algorithms to determine relevancy ranking. Some of these include determining whether the search term appears in the META keywords tag, others whether the search term appears in the body text of a web page. A variety of techniques are used to spamdex, including listing chosen keywords on a page in small-point font face the same colour as the page background (rendering it invisible to humans but not search engine web crawlers).
Search engine spammers are generally aware that the content that they promote is not very useful or relevant to the ordinary internet surfer. They try to use methods that will make the website appear above more relevant websites in the search engine listings.
Here are some common spamdexing techniques:
Spamdexing often gets confused with legitimate search engine optimization (SEO) techniques, which do not involve deceit.
Spamming involves getting web sites more exposure than they deserve for their keywords, leading to unsatisfactory search results. Optimization involves getting web sites the rank they deserve on the most targeted keywords, leading to satisfactory search experiences. To be sure, there is much gray area between the two extremes. The root problem is that traffic from search engines and directories. For that reason, many search engine administrators say that any form of search engine optimization used to improve a website's page rank is nothing else than spamdexing.
Many search engines check for instances of spamdexing and will remove suspect pages from their indexes.
In 2002, search engine manipulator SearchKing filed suit in an Oklahoma court against search engine Google. SearchKing's claim was that Google's tactics to prevent spamdexing constituted an unfair business practice. This may be compared to lawsuits which email spammers have filed against spam-fighters, as in various cases against MAPS and other DNSBLs. In January of 2003, the court pronounced a summary judgment in Google's favor.
| <center>This article is part of the Spamming series. |
| E-mail spam | Messaging spam | Newsgroup spam | Spamdexing Blog spam | Mobile phone spam |
| Make money fast | Advance fee fraud | Phishing |
| History of spamming |
| Stopping e-mail abuse | DNSBL |
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