Can I get a link on this page?
Yes. Premier and Major W3C Supporters may have links to their sites from this page. Premier Supporters have made a contribution of 10000 USD. Major Supporters have made a contribution of 2500 - 9999 USD |
Can I get a link on this page?
Yes. Premier and Major W3C Supporters may have links to their sites from this page. Premier Supporters have made a contribution of 10000 USD. Major Supporters have made a contribution of 2500 - 9999 USD |
Unlike W3.org, these aren't nofollow links. So they are outright bought for anchor text goodness and PR juice.
There are companies that specialize in submitting crap to digg, reddit, even here on HN - those are all paid links.
Infographics are a marketing tool sites use to generate links - you pay your money, someone designs it and submits it to social news sites to generate links back to your completely unrelated website. Those are paid links too, and not necessarily the aforementioned ones.
The mainstream blog networks are virtually content farms these days churning out summaries designed to do nothing more than reinforce their search positions for companies and products etc.
There's a big market for selling and swapping links, any forum for webmasters of any kind is going to have that at play.
Then there's flat out spam - last year I watched a site get all the way up to the top 10 for "free online games" with nothing more than blog spamming software.
There's all the sponsorships, endorsements, paid promotions, reviews with incentives, referral/affiliate stuff, etc etc.
So many ways money can change hands to cause a link to appear on a site.
Meanwhile there's a massive amount of the internet that is not going to get any legitimate link love, ever.
This I just found in the HTML for the linked supporters page:
<meta name="ROBOTS" content="INDEX, NOFOLLOW" />
It would appear they are nofollow'ing the links and they should not really be considered 'paid links' WRT increasing pagerank.In response, Kyle linked me to the Major Supporters page, on which the links themselves do not have the nofollow attribute, so I deleted my comment. However, it seems both Kyle and I forgot to check meta tags, and the links in question are indeed nofollowed.
Good catch. :)