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Old 08-16-2009, 08:31 PM  
marketsmart
HOMICIDAL TROLL KILLER
 
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sunnybrook Institution for the Criminally Insane
Posts: 20,419
Quote:
Originally Posted by Angry Jew Cat View Post
simple symmetrical (i dunno what other word to use) link wheels can be easily identified by the spiders. i can't verify one way or the other if simple wheels are losing steam, but i've heard talk of it too. which might be jibberish being spit by random im failures, but does make sense. if the search engines wanted to combat manipulation of the serps, a simple wheel is easily identified. more complex wheels with crisscrossing paths however can be next to impossible to identify. i have a handful of different linkwheel charts which are apparently mathematically impossible problems to solve. the charts themselves are an np-complete problem, making them algorythmically next to impossible to solve. solving these problems still eludes computational scientists. and solving the problems grows harder and harder as the size of the problem grows. So if you're using a larger complex linkwheel, i imagine you're pretty safe for the time being. As for the simpler, easily identified linkwheels i really wouldn't be surprised fi they're taking a shitkicking, but i don't know i learnt linkwheeling from a hardcore mathfag. seems to be working fine for me...
thats the answer...

well designed wheels are very difficult if not impossible to detect with a machine...

however, i think that the se's could look for the same consistent patterns in the sites that links are coming from especially considering the frequency that wheels use social networking sites..

i have heard that google is starting to place less weight on social sites, but i guess time will tell...
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