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Twitter Founders Accused Of Bending Over For Google


Founder says nothing to see here

A bit of a Twitter spat erupted yesterday regarding Twitter making links on bio pages nofollow. Well, a spat would technically need to be two sided; it was more of a rage against the machine* with the machine remaining mostly silent.

As usual, the drama begins with a blog post. Back in July, Dave Naylor succinctly and generally without comment notified users of how despite Twitter (rather uncontroversially at the time) making weblinks from the profile page nofollow, they’d neglected to do the same under the Bio section.

Google’s Webspam cap’n


That same day, Google’s Webspam cap’n, Matt Cutts, publicly tweeted about an email he sent to Twitter cofounder Evan Williams (also founder of Blogger, and inventor of the word “blogger,” according to Wikipedia) about Naylor’s blog post. The contents of that email, one might imagine, is between them.

Cutts’ tweet went virtually unnoticed until yesterday, when Rae Hoffman blogged her discontent at losing all that link juice she’d built up on her Twitter profile:

 

My personal twitter page has 1700 links, 1500+ followers, contains over 7000 tweets and is a toolbar PR of 5. Last I checked, I got all those links. I wrote all that content. All those people were following me as a person. I developed that link popularity. Why on earth would I not deserve ALL the benefits (including that in the form of a profile link) from building up the value of that page?


The purpose of making links on Twitter nofollow, according to founder and former Googler Biz Stone, is to fight spam created by people or bots to capitalize on juice-passing links from a trusted source like Twitter.

Hoffman continued her complaints by suggesting a definite link between Cutts’ tweet and Twitter’s immediate nofollowing of bio links. This raised more questions about Google’s power in deciding which links count and which ones don’t. Editorial links thus far have been upheld as legitimate, even from free social media and blogging services. Only paid links have garnered any direct opposition from Google’s spam team and penalties have come in the form of rank-busting or delisting.

barrage of tweets


Despite a barrage of tweets aimed at Cutts from both Hoffman and Michael Gray, the latter tweeting a fast and furious intervals at Cutts and Williams, no answers were publicly forthcoming, that heralded transparency suddenly clouded by the fog escaping through zipped lips. Hoffman questioned about Google coercion while Gray blistered his 2,500 followers with complaints about Google distorting the way the Web works.

Cutts took time to debunk myths about Chrome yesterday, but so far, along with Williams, has been mum on the issue of whether Cutts personally and semi-publicly reprimanded a former Googler.

In response to WebProNews request for comment, Stone denied any backstage leveraging. He replied, simply, “Using nofollow helps Twitter fight spam. It's possible we could be more sophisticated about how we employ nofollow links but we're certainly not under any pressure from Google.”





Speaking of Rage of Against the Machine, did you see this rockin’ protest outside the RNC? Now that’s some quality ragin’.
 

 

 

About the author:
Jason Lee Miller is a WebProNews editor and writer covering business and technology.

12 Comments

great information

Its really a great information.

can anyone actually say no

can anyone actually say no to google?

this is just hearsay where

this is just hearsay where is the facts

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Nofollow nightmare

I think its rather ridiculous that Google can influence how websites choose to link to each. I guess Google is synonymous with Internet nowadays.

The problem was not the nofollow!

Hi Jason,

The problem was not having a nofollow in the author section of the profile. That's  been there for a very long time. The problem was that Twitter removed clickability functions in the Bio part of the profile; hence, killing all links that were do follow.

Here is more reading: Was Twitter coerced by Google?

coercion

Well it,s very interesting but can anyone really coerce anyone else into doing something if it doesn,t benefit them,im sure there must have been some benefit to twitter.

Google has been using the

Google has been using the excuse of the "nofollow" tag to protect their self-interest. Nothing wrong with protecting their corporate greed, BUT they should be with everyone. Unfortunately they are not, because the little guys are the ones getting penalized or coerced while the big brands can get away with so many things that violate their TOS.

There are many examples to cite that this thread will be small to have all them.

Media Campaign for Equity

I'm interested in reaching social network websites who are interested in trading equity for a $10,000,000 media campaign.

One more thing

 

If you want to play with the big boys... and twitter obviously does... one needs to play the game.  Don't tell me that there was no benefit for twitter from this decision.  For one, this decision will increase the google page rank of their internal pages, and help them actually rank better with Google.  Twitter might even get a few listings?  I see it as a first step toward optimizing their website to capture a greater amount of traffic from Google.  This, in turn, will help the twitterees, including Ms. Hoffman, who actually may have their profile pages rank higher and have more value.  Page Rank is usually overvalued in my opinion anyway. 

twitter nofollow

 

Matt Cutts does have power.  Like it or not, Google does dominate the web.  They control/allow people to go to "where they want to go."  Usually, this works exceedingly well, but Google must make decisions on how they want to work with entities and how they want entities to interact with them.  Who can argue with a monopoly?

Don't We All

Whether we like it or not, we’re all at the mercy of Google to some degree. Therefore, we have to dance to the music played. Don’t we all do this? At least those that want to survive online do.

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