Tuesday, March 06, 2012 at 11:23 AM
Webmaster level: AdvancedFree web hosting services can be great! Many of these services have helped to lower costs and technical barriers for webmasters and they continue to enable beginner webmasters to start their adventure on the web. Unfortunately, sometimes these lower barriers (meant to encourage less techy audiences) can attract some dodgy characters like spammers who look for cheap and easy ways to set up dozens or hundreds of sites that add little or no value to the web. When it comes to automatically generated sites, our stance remains the same: if the sites do not add sufficient value, we generally consider them as spam and take appropriate steps to protect our users from exposure to such sites in our natural search results.
If a free hosting service begins to show patterns of spam, we make a strong effort to be granular and tackle only spammy pages or sites. However, in some cases, when the spammers have pretty much taken over the free web hosting service or a large fraction of the service, we may be forced to take more decisive steps to protect our users and remove the entire free web hosting service from our search results. To prevent this from happening, we would like to help owners of free web hosting services by sharing what we think may help you save valuable resources like bandwidth and processing power, and also protect your hosting service from these spammers:
- Publish a clear abuse policy and communicate it to your users, for example during the sign-up process. This step will contribute to transparency on what you consider to be spammy activity.
- In your sign-up form, consider using CAPTCHAs or similar verification tools to only allow human submissions and prevent automated scripts from generating a bunch of sites on your hosting service. While these methods may not be 100% foolproof, they can help to keep a lot of the bad actors out.
- Try to monitor your free hosting service for other spam signals like redirections, large numbers of ad blocks, certain spammy keywords, large sections of escaped JavaScript code, etc. Using the site: operator query or Google Alerts may come in handy if you’re looking for a simple, cost efficient solution.
- Keep a record of signups and try to identify typical spam patterns like form completion time, number of requests sent from the same IP address range, user-agents used during signup, user names or other form-submitted values chosen during signup, etc. Again, these may not always be conclusive.
- Keep an eye on your webserver log files for sudden traffic spikes, especially when a newly-created site is receiving this traffic, and try to identify why you are spending more bandwidth and processing power.
- Try to monitor your free web hosting service for phishing and malware-infected pages. For example, you can use the Google Safe Browsing API to regularly test URLs from your service, or sign up to receive alerts for your AS.
- Come up with a few sanity checks. For example, if you’re running a local Polish free web hosting service, what are the odds of thousands of new and legitimate sites in Japanese being created overnight on your service? There’s a number of tools you may find useful for language detection of newly created sites, for example language detection libraries or the Google Translate API v2.
Last but not least, if you run a free web hosting service be sure to monitor your services for sudden activity spikes that may indicate a spam attack in progress.
For more tips on running a quality hosting service, have a look at our previous post. Lastly, be sure to sign up and verify your site in Google Webmaster Tools so we may be able to notify you when needed or if we see issues.



13 comments:
If you want a free website than better start a blog at blogger.com less control but it's still a website :)
yes agree with Jack ...... if you r looking for free website then go with wordpress or blogger......even though it is a blogging platform but you will get a look and feel of well structured website.
This is good information and advice not only for free web hosting services, but any site (e.g. a forum or blog) that involves anonymous user membership and/or user-generated content.
salam kenal.....
Great news. It was really time to hide these kind of spam blogs made by XRumer or LFE in search results.
Great notes, thanks Kaspar & Fili.
I started my Internet adventure (back 1994) with free sites like Geocities, Tripod and that kind of stuff. It was just great for the purpose and cost equaled nada.
Nowadays rules are different (well, you know better than I, isn't it?) and if I had to advice a beginner webmaster or digital marketeer apprentice I'd go as read somewhere above my lines: blogger and such these platforms, in fact I am a happy free Wordpress user despite many of my collegues think (or at least say) it is working against my SEO interests.
Thanks for such useful articles.
I think that keeping in mind "useful for users" will be a good strategy for promoting every web-site. Thanks for this post!
Unfortunately, a lot of internet markets do abuse sites that allow you to set up a free page or blog. Some of these folks use a program that can bypass captcha and set up like 100 blogspot accounts etc. These blogs have no value except to link back to certain pages; they are just linkfarms. It is unfortunate because they are trying to game the system whereas many of us are trying to build legitimate content.
Jackie at automotive seo
Great advice.
Information is not only beneficial for free web hosting service provider but is also valuable for webmasters using free web hosts (especially in shared hosting). This article guides to check out if other websites are abusing their web host provider's services.
Thanks for information
Information is not only beneficial for free web hosting service provider but is also valuable for webmasters using free web hosts (especially in shared hosting). This article guides to check out if other websites are abusing their web host provider's services.
Thanks for information
Nice! Thanks Fili Wiese!
I think it is only appropriate to do this because the internet should be a good source of useful information and not just no quality websites whose main goal is only to earn income and not to impart good information. That is why most businesses rely on a reliable web hosting to avoid these problems.
Post a Comment