Post by kmstfatema on Mar 5, 2024 6:04:12 GMT 2
Those who are professional SEO specialists are now accustomed, unfortunately, to the fact that Google never sleeps and always has the need, even if not requested, in my opinion, to invent something. This is the case of the topic we will address today: I'm talking about the new link attributes rel=Those who are professional SEO specialists are now accustomed, unfortunately, to the fact that Google never sleeps and always has the need, even if not requested, in my opinion, to invent something. This is the case of the topic we will address today: I'm talking about the new link attributes rel="sponsored" and rel="ugc" . Honestly, at least I didn't really feel the need for these two new attributes, which in my opinion could be, a bit like the Search Console disavow, dangerous weapons in the hands of Google, but let's see together specifically what it is. Google shocked the SEO world by announcing big changes in how publishers should mark nofollow links.
The changes, while useful in helping Google Germany Telegram Number Data understand the web, have still created confusion and raised a number of questions. I will try to answer your questions and doubts later. New link attributes new attributes for nofollow links After years of unchallenged reign of the rel="nofollow" attribute , which until now has allowed us to limit the transfer of power of our domain , Google is introducing new ways to mark outgoing links. We are talking about the rel="sponsored" , which marks with the wording sponsored the links that constitute paid advertising or placements (commonly defined as paid links), and the rel="ugc" , an attribute that allows you to mark with the acronym ugc user generated content links to user-generated content , such as comments and forum posts. This last point also indicates a change in the perception of links with the rel="nofollow" attribute. Until now, according to Google, nofollow links were not included in the search engine's algorithm.
With the introduction of new attributes, this is about to change and nofollow, sponsored and ugc should be treated as suggestions which, along with other factors, will be useful in determining page ranking. For further information you can read the post: Dofollow vs Nofollow links: signals and consequences . No Follow Links: What Happens Now? 14 years after its introduction, Google today announced significant changes in how it treats the "nofollow" link attribute. The big points: Link attribution can be done in three ways : "nofollow", "sponsored", and "ugc", each of which now has a different meaning (the fourth way, by default, means no attributed value). For ranking purposes, Google now treats each of the nofollow attributes as.
The changes, while useful in helping Google Germany Telegram Number Data understand the web, have still created confusion and raised a number of questions. I will try to answer your questions and doubts later. New link attributes new attributes for nofollow links After years of unchallenged reign of the rel="nofollow" attribute , which until now has allowed us to limit the transfer of power of our domain , Google is introducing new ways to mark outgoing links. We are talking about the rel="sponsored" , which marks with the wording sponsored the links that constitute paid advertising or placements (commonly defined as paid links), and the rel="ugc" , an attribute that allows you to mark with the acronym ugc user generated content links to user-generated content , such as comments and forum posts. This last point also indicates a change in the perception of links with the rel="nofollow" attribute. Until now, according to Google, nofollow links were not included in the search engine's algorithm.
With the introduction of new attributes, this is about to change and nofollow, sponsored and ugc should be treated as suggestions which, along with other factors, will be useful in determining page ranking. For further information you can read the post: Dofollow vs Nofollow links: signals and consequences . No Follow Links: What Happens Now? 14 years after its introduction, Google today announced significant changes in how it treats the "nofollow" link attribute. The big points: Link attribution can be done in three ways : "nofollow", "sponsored", and "ugc", each of which now has a different meaning (the fourth way, by default, means no attributed value). For ranking purposes, Google now treats each of the nofollow attributes as.