I think the answer to that, is there are different kinds of popularity- and if your kind of popularity is the kind that doesn't create loyalty, but instead relies on people being driven to you... don't piss off who's doing the driving, unless you have a plan to replace them.
I see it as a shop on a boardwalk. Sure, it may have some kind of loyalty- but its overall foot traffic is driven by people coming to the boardwalk.
If you piss off the owners of the board walk so that they build a wall between your st
Cryptocurrency news site sells ads to casinos. This angers Google who threatens and then follows through with blacklisting the site and pretending it doesn't exist in any search result. Traffic to site goes down.
. . . Why exactly is Google angry about here? I mean, sure, NOBODY actually likes ads and casino ads rank right around porn ads. Do they just hate cryptocurrency? Also understandable, but I think I might have missed the point where Google became the Internet morality
Is this news because this happens often, or not often enough (the google manual death penalty)?
If people already knew about this site, wouldn't they keep going back to it? Wouldn't they have the site bookmarked?
Not saying their traffic wouldn't go down, but if it was that "popular", shouldn't the people who already know about it still viist?
I see it as a shop on a boardwalk. Sure, it may have some kind of loyalty- but its overall foot traffic is driven by people coming to the boardwalk.
If you piss off the owners of the board walk so that they build a wall between your st
Help me out with this one.
Cryptocurrency news site sells ads to casinos. This angers Google who threatens and then follows through with blacklisting the site and pretending it doesn't exist in any search result. Traffic to site goes down.
. . . Why exactly is Google angry about here? I mean, sure, NOBODY actually likes ads and casino ads rank right around porn ads. Do they just hate cryptocurrency? Also understandable, but I think I might have missed the point where Google became the Internet morality