Jessica Cox
2.29.2012
Serious Stuff

Google Privacy Changes: Don’t Panic

Google brings a massive Privacy Policy Update live tomorrow!

What does this mean for you?

Everything you do on Google, Gmail, YouTube, Google Docs or any of the other 60+ properties of the Google-verse will be tracked, and the data shared.

Google Privacy Policy (Lego)

Basically if a tree falls in the Google-verse, they will be able to measure the impact, wind speed, and how many chipmunks were affected on the other side of the forest.

The National Association of Attorneys General were not happy:

“Google’s new privacy policy is troubling for a number of reasons.”

“On a fundamental level, the policy appears to invade consumer privacy by automatically sharing personal information consumers input into one Google product with all Google products.”

Fun Fact: You can’t opt out.

You’re in for the whole ride. Unless you want to stop using all Google properties.

Why are they doing this?

Google wants to tailor the web just for you. They will use all the information they have about you to tailor your results to perfection. This means over time, no two search results will look the same.

This should come as little shock to you.

After all, Facebook knows your age, sex, religion, political affiliation, whether you are dating, what year you graduated from college, how you spend your free time, and whether you like Star Wars.

Wowzers.

Photo by keso

Jonathan Cox
10.11.2009
Eureka!

Google Search Myth Busted: Bye, Bye “Meta Keyword” Tags!

Boo-yah! It’s official. On September 21, 2009 , Google Search Quality Team member Matt Cutts posted that Google does NOT consider the meta keyword tag in their ranking analysis of websites.

Why doesn’t Google use the once-popular meta tag? Matt says:

“About a decade ago, search engines judged pages only on the content of web pages, not any so-called “off-page” factors such as the links pointing to a web page. In those days, keyword meta tags quickly became an area where someone could stuff often-irrelevant keywords without typical visitors ever seeing those keywords. Because the keywords meta tag was so often abused, many years ago Google began disregarding the keywords meta tag.”

But the keywords tag isn’t the only meta touted by search engine marketers. The meta description tag, the one usually used to put your site’s “elevator pitch” out there for search engines, has long been an old standby for shady search engine marketers. Does it improve your ranking to include a meta description tag that’s keyword optimized?

Here’s what Matt has to say:

“We do sometimes use the “description” meta tag as the text for our search results snippets…

“Even though we sometimes use the description meta tag for the snippets we show, we still don’t use the description meta tag in our ranking.”

Summary: If you’re being sold Search Engine Optimization and your service provider tries to win you over with  tales of first page rankings through keyword optimized meta description and keyword tags, you’re being had. Run like the wind.

So how DO you get real results in your rankings?

Here are five things you can do that really work:

  1. Title tags
  2. SEO content
  3. Inbound links
  4. Clean code: Make sure your site passes W3C validation
  5. Hire Aqua Vita Creative to get your site up to snuff

If you’re curious, here’s the link to the original article:

http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2009/09/google-does-not-use-keywords-meta-tag.html