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SEO: different class c IP's, but same DNS
Do SE's also look at if sites linking to eachother got the same nameserver even if the sites are on different class c IP's?
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Not yet, but it is thought that this will be the next step. That is why we use a different NS for every C, just staying ahead of the game.
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You don't even have to go to that extent unless you are a sloppy linker or intend on doing lots of crosslinking within your IP ranges.
Your IP has about as much importance as your meta tags, or your internal links, your domain age, or your content, etc. Its just one part of many in the algorythym. While you need to pay attention to it, its less important then most people think. And far less important then alot of hosts or "experts" will lead you to beleive. Its about the whole package and the web surrounding the page. There is thousands of sites out there that prove that several pages can rank on the same IP with differant search terms for diferant pages. Blogspot, thumblogger, youtube, facebook are many examples of sites that do so. There is way more important things to learn and worry about then what classes your IP's are on, and where the nameservers point. A fresh site with a proper SEO strategy that is built on a IP that 1000 other sites are also on will still rank in the search engines. As long as it isnt so heavily crosslinked from the same nest of sites that its blatently obvious that its spam. In my experience, IP only becomes a ranking factor as a check. You could say it "checks" the IP against internal and external links, if it reaches a certain threshold then it could be deamed as "the same nest" and spam. |
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You sir are correct..:2 cents::) |
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gee, now who are we to believe? |
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PEOPLE, will you ever REALIZE that all that matters in the game is fucking quality and options given to surfer to choose from! If you have a site on an ip that is shared with couple other quality sites you WILL GET ZERO (proven!!) rankings change, even if you move it to different host with different DNS! Don't be fooled by all those "SEO Experts" that offer their services just to cash on ignorance! (nobody is called in this thread particularly, just general advice) As long as you do not do sneaky stuff and have pure quality that attracts your surfers, the least thing you have to worry about is your ip and its dns! Get that already! |
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shit this is a good thread :) ..... nice read!
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WG |
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PS what were the terms used in this "experiment"? Company names like Microsoft? :1orglaugh |
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so we conclude that dedicated IPs on different C classes are worth shit? ......... there goes my investment ......... LOL:upsidedow
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WG |
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Take it for what you will. |
If your site is on the same IP as another site that is trying for the same keywords, you are fucked if the other site is older. Read the patent.
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In Australia they won't even give ISPs IPs for hosting. You have to host all sites
namebased off the one IP. Due to the US having the lions share of IPs, they rigged it from the start. I do however believe IPs play a role. Though you won't really see this unless you're trying to ghost 50,000 new pages a day. Like it's said above, buy a good domain, put good content/text on it and you're done. It's GOOGLEs job to list quality near the top. They need to do this to keep their surfers. No matter what you do, if it's quality then it's googles job to give it a #1. Been trying to explain this to a guy with 200 different FTP logins at some stupid webhost that sets them all up with different DNS. The sites are all unique and worthy of high ranks regardless of where they're hosted, but still people believe these so called SEO guru's. -Ben |
Have you ever heard of the host crowding penalty? You think that is an urban legend or something?
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I think that having sites in different IPs and C-classes works quite nice for interlinking.......I saw in a mainstream board a guy selling links from his blog network (300+ sites) and all of the blogs have dupe content yet several of them have PR5-6 rank, this is not a legend I saw the list of sites, checked the content and PR by myself.
Btw, I am in no way inferring that IP addresses have anything to do with the page rank of those duplicate content blogs however, it doesn't seems to hurt |
Heres the deal.
The need for multiple ip/nameserver etc. systems are for one thing. Buttfucking the fuck out of google/yahoo etc. If you want to run 300 sites with unique content (all diff niches) and interlink them all you'll be fine with a few ip's. If you want to run 3,000 sites with the same unique content (that is then changed a little a few times) and then start interlinking.....you need a package like i got in my sig, or like baddogs network. Thats it folks....thats the whole ballgame. In the end...the guy with 300 sites, all with handwritten content (from his 10 employees) may get 300,000-600,000 hits a day (all se) assuming the traffic total does not reflect any crap trades etc. The guy with 3,000 with the same amount of content will probably end up with 3,000,000 and the same amount of work on his plate (if automated correctly). There are maybe 20 people on gfy who can even do this (as described above), do to monetary constraints for setting up the 3,000 network & maintaining the servers/ip's bandwidth, scripts etc. Also when (if) google/yahoo catchs on, you just lost $23,970 in domain costs & starting over from scratch. So trust me when i say you need professional consulting if you even want to consider buttfucking google. Or else they WILL butt fuck you! Trust in dat! :pimp |
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Now again i will say, there is far more important things to worry about. Using new IP's and new Nameservers is not done as a offensive or strategical move, it is purely functionable as a defense, for showing the links are from "external sources". Now i can agree that you will not take a more then 2 spaces in a serp with the same IP, but i have to ask, who in their right fucking mind would attempt to rank more then 2 domains for the same serp and host them all on the same IP, i guess only a fool. |
Too true.
Spamming SEs you'll need IPs. It's a game tho.... You play for 6 months, get lucky, make a mint, then it dies again. Takes alot of tweaking your programs and customising Apache to feed pages that look legit to google in all ways. Safer to just make good sites. Then IPs don't matter so much, while DNS matters not at all. -Ben |
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That's okay. Everyone has someone they trust. |
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The only reason you would need tons of IP's if you have huge networks in the thousands of domain names/websites. If you have just a couple website you don't need different class C's.
And interlinking your websites is a "newbie" style of SEO. There are better ways to do linking schemes if you have a network of sites. Even if you have different class c's, private registration, blah, blah, blah, if your in it for the long run you'll get fucked by the SE's sooner or later. THis type of SEO isn't the way to go if your in the business for the long run. |
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You cater to seo webmasters, you should be smart enough to atleast engage in a quality conversation on the subject. To just reply to me and say you didnt even read the link i sent to help you from sounding foolish is completely ridiculous. |
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I covered every word of this already. everyone read my fucking post.....i am the ip king bow down! |
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for the ones saying if different IP's are a waste of money, no ofcourse not. It all plays a small factor as someone explained in one of the replies here.
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i use hostnine reseller plan .. there i have the option to select the location of the server (multiple datacenters - multiple C classes). they also have the option to use my own DNS for each domain (for ex: ns1.mydomain.com , ns2.mydomain.com .. ns1.myotherdomain.com , ns2.myotherdomain.com).
my question is: this DNS is basically a clustered IP, so my DNS ns1.my-domain.com have the same IP with ns1.my-other-domain.com. Is this make a difference for big G00gle??? |
sorry...long posts give me a headache so i dont read them.
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I learned that trick back in high school & college :winkwink: |
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As far as not following the link, I am sorry, but citing Matt Cutts tells me that you trust what he has to say, based on his position with Google . . . even if it is his job to make you think SEO doesn't work. |
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seo is good and the more the better... separate C-Class ip's from separate name servers and networks is the best way to gooo :pimp |
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But that being said, Having mutliple ip's spread across mutliple blocks is just one part of the total picture when it comes to SEO. If you have a crap site, not matter how many ip's you have your going to never rank anywhere worth a shit. Ip's are really just a small factor in the big equation, Without proper keyword structures and relevance, theme relevance, theme density, themed content and the proper silo stucture of your site you might get a decent rankings but youll never be able to rank for high dollar short tails. Even proper linking doesnt play as much of a role as it once did. Its all about LSI, Silo'ing and theme relevance (quality scores) now. SEO is really pretty straight foward, follow the proper formula and you will rank consistantly over and over ( and for the long term), do it wrong and youll be bashing your head against the wall wondering why you can get ranked. I use 1 ip to 1 domain for all sites i want to rank and keep ranked, it works well for me and i cant say it will work the same for others. |
There's no $$ in SEO.
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Grandfather of selling SEO maybe.
Most of the true SEO guys from our industry made their mint and got out long ago. Got sick of managing servers getting crashed by the google bot crawling millions of pages per day. -Ben |
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