Posted by Jane Copland
This morning, I was talking to Rob Kerry about some particularly competitive search phrases and looking around in the SERPs. We"d gone through most of the usual suspects when [cheap flights] came up. Google duly returned its top ten, and at the bottom, I noticed farecast.live.com.
The first thing I noticed was the unfortunate title tag and snippet. However, things got stranger when I clicked through to the site. Before I go on, I should say that before it was bought by Microsoft, Farecast was an SEOmoz client. They aren"t anymore, but the fact that I"d worked within the niche and with this site before was what caught my attention.
The page loaded, but I definitely didn"t recognise the content as belonging to either Farecast
or Microsoft.
Refreshing the page brought consistently different results. Here is a sample:
Each refresh brought up another strange page, including several error pages. Attempting to complete a search on a page that did load properly was also impossible. I wondered what would happen if you visited Farecast"s previous domain: Up until a few minutes ago, www.farecast.com was not redirecting to farecast.live.com for me. Without the www, it was redirecting. It appears to be working now.
Web-Sniffer"s results were also amusing, as refreshing farecast.live.com"s Web-Sniffer result brought up alternate pages on every attempt as well. Whilst the strange, rotating content was interesting, the fact that the parked page showed up was more so. Suspecting that this was a DNS error of Microsoft"s making, Rob wondered if he could add Live.com to his list of parked domains. He could.
Holy Christ. Sedo thought that Rob owned Live.com and was crediting him with the commission from the page. The conversation went something like this, with a couple of edits:
23:02:05 Rob: oh s**t!
23:02:23 Rob: "Live.com has successfully been added to your parking account"
23:02:28 Jane: no
23:02:29 Jane: f***ing
23:02:29 Jane: way
A couple of weeks ago, Duncan wrote about Apple.com and the localisation issues they have in using Akamai, whose load-balancing system results in solely U.S. content being shown to Googlebot. Akamai serves content based upon location, and it seems that someone at Microsoft added a Sedo IP address to the routing system Akamai employs.
Since earning income in this manner is well and truly illegal, Rob emailed Sedo immediately. The traffic and commission has stopped and the problem appears to have been rectified. Similarly on Microsoft"s end, farecast.live.com now resolves correctly.
Because Rob can explain this stuff far better than I can (although he"s promised to teach me if I continue buying him pints of Guinness), I"ll let him spell out what happened:
It appears that Microsoft is using Akamai for their DNS and Content Distribution Network on farecast.live.com. This usually involves either the service provider caching a copy of their client"s content on globally distributed servers to prevent server overloading, or filtering out the requests between the client"s servers in order to balance load. My best guess is that a Microsoft employee has specified an IP address belonging to the domain auction and parking provider, Sedo. Sedo"s parking servers are designed to allow any domain name to point to them (in this case the subdomain farecast.live.com) and serve appropriate adverts for the domain.
Oh, the consequences of not keeping a close eye on your sites, especially if you"re a big site and are ranking for some money keywords. Maybe Live can be pleased that Rob and I came across this and not someone just a little bit more sinister.
Do you like this post? Yes No
>>
Source Link>>Blog:
SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog>>Publish Date: 6/27/2008 7:02:59 AM
>>Keywords: rob microsoft
Related Posts>>Whiteboard Interviews-URL Hijacking with Rob Kerry # Posted by great scott!Another of our video interviews from SMX Advanced. Rob Kerry of Ayima Search Marketing (often better know as evilgreenmonkey) joins Rand to discuss the damn sneaky process of URL
>>SEW Experts: Don"t Be An SEO Alien # In today"s In-House column, "Don"t Be An SEO Alien," Rob Kerry has some practical advice for in-house SEOs, and it doesn"t have to do with following Best Practices.
>>SEW Experts: Playing Dirty With PPC # In today"s In-House column, "Playing Dirty With PPC," Rob Kerry gives in-house SEMs a few black hat PPC tricks, to help them keep up with competitors that choose to play dirty.
>>Google Responds To Aussie Fraud Claims # Google has responded to the "legal proceedings by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) that Google has failed to adequately distinguish "sponsored links" from "organic" search res
>>SEW Experts: Look After Your Brand and Your Brand Will Look After You # In today"s In-House column, "Look After Your Brand and Your Brand Will Look After You," Rob Kerry explains that an in-house SEO"s work doesn"t stop with optimizing page elements. He tells you how to p
>>12月16日链接篇: ASP.NET, ASP.NET AJAX, ASP.NET MVC, VS, .NET, IIS7, WPF # 【原文地址】December 16th Links: ASP.NET, ASP.NET AJAX, ASP.NET MVC, VS, .NET, IIS7, WPF 【原文发表日期】Sunday, December 16, 2007 11:29 PM 这是我的链接系列的最新篇。也请参阅我的ASP.NET 技巧,诀窍和教程网页里 我以前写的众多很受欢迎的文章的链接。 ASP.NET Crea
>>A Newcomer"s Guide to SES? # Rob Kerry, aka evilgreenmonkey, has put together a guide for newbies to search industry events. "The Search Conference Groupie" details the eight categories of attendees: The CelebrityThe Wannabe Cele
>>Is Search to Social Media a Natural Progression? # "Search marketing is becoming more about marketing, and less about search," said Rob Murray, president and CEO of iProspect. That"s a pretty common theme these days, as search takes its spot at the bi