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How Google Rates Links from Facebook and Twitter

Google's Matt Cutts Talks FB/Twitter Links and Pagerank

78 comments Monday, January 18, 2010

The first Matt Cutts Answers Questions About Google video of the year has been posted, and in it Matt addresses links from Twitter and Facebook, after talking about his shaved head again. Specifically, the submitted question he answers is:

Links from relevant and important sites have always been a great way to get traffic & acceptance for a website. How do you rate links from new platforms like Twitter, FB to a website?

Do you rely on links from Facebook and Twitter updates? Discuss here.

Essentially, Matt says Google treats links the same whether they are from Facebook or Twitter, as they would if they were from any other site. It's just an extension of the pagerank formula, where its not the amount of links, but how reputable those links are (the company uses a similar strategy for ranking Tweets themselves in real-time search).

While Facebook and Twitter links may be treated like any other links, they do still come with things to keep in mind. For one, with Facebook, you have to keep in mind that a lot of profiles are not public. When a profile is not public, Google can't crawl it, and it can't assign pagerank on the outgoing links if it can't fetch the page to see what the outgoing links are. If the page is public, it might be able to flow pagerank, Matt says. With Twitter, most links are nofollowed anyway.

"At least in our web search (our organic rankings), we treat links the same from Twitter or Facebook or, you know, pick your favorite platform or website, just like we'd treat links from Wordpress or .edus or.govs or anything like that," says Cutts. "It's not like a link from an .edu automatically carries more weight or a link from a .gov automatically carries more weight. But, the specific platforms might have issues, whether it's not being crawled or it might be nofollow. It would keep those particular links from flowing pagerank."

There you have it. Matt's response probably doesn't come as much of a surprise to most of you, but it's always nice to hear information like this straight from Google.

Do you like the way Google handls links from Facebook and Twitter? Would you do it differently? Share your thoughts.


Related Articles:

> Tips for Getting Found in Real-Time Searches

> Google Makes a Second Real-Time Search Announcement

> Yahoo Rolling Out Something Kind of Like Real-Time Search

About the author:
Chris Crum has been a part of the WebProNews team and the iEntry Network of B2B Publications since 2003. Follow WebProNews on Facebook or Twitter. Twitter: @CCrum237

Socail media gets more weight on caffeine

whoever practices the worlds most competitve keyword terms on SEO
probably noticed that caffeine has kicked in almost two weeks ago.

results were seriously shuffled on the worlds most competitive terms,
we can see clearly tha social media activity on twitter, facebook, bookamrking sites, social related networks helped keeping positions steday on the gushing water of caffeine.

i am very glad for this post, as for SEO becomes easy.

instead of people spamming blog comments all over the place or buying links for money and winning the competition now we can make socail buzzing in the right approcah and creat relevant links form hot sources.

most important the web becomes cleaner and spammy SEO companies get kicked out of the field.

Thank you google, black hats beware...

Social Media links

Nive post but.......Same old stuff from Zippy the pinhead.
What he fails to tell you is that all the hundreds of sites that surround Twitter where you can post from eg Twitvid etc etc appear in serps . Also Yahoo and Bing ignore the nofollow tag and results appear there and google picks up from those. Profiles not just tweets/ posts etc should be optimized , and these regularly appear in Google serps.

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