But what are these 'dins' strings when searching for site:google.com/search mentioned at **) footer of the article:
otis dins google web http://google.com/search?q=Otis |
Confirmed: a. title is the text of the link (title of "highest ranking link"???) b. it happens not only to "non-crawled pages" but also to pages that have been crawled in the past and are now excluded with robots.txt
Rumored: there are other changes being done in the past 24 hours. |
> But what are these 'dins' strings
The result shows as
----------- 11359730n6 dins google web google.com/search?q=11359730n6 -----------
so what you can do is phrase-search for "11359730n6 dins google web" and then you can find a page which actually has that as link text to pointing to a Google result. It seems to be a Spanish word for something like "in" but I can't seem to translate it with the Google Translator... |
It is catalan language : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalan_language
And you are right, means "in".
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I'm caught thinking about how that could be exploited. Just an idea: (please tell me, if I'm wrong)
If I get a SERP for a less competitive search term, for which I rank 1st (e.g. title: blue pill nicheterm) indexed, may I bomb that SERP with links to make it rank for "blue pill"?
if that loophole exists then there must be a way to use google.com's trust.
Not that I will do that... I just care....
Am I wrong? |
It's now some weeks that Google uses anchor texts to title SOME uncrawled web pages.
To be chosen for a web page, an anchor text must include terms common in the group of other anchor texts that point to the page or terms shown in the URL of the page. |
Low, in the case of "11359730n6 dins google web" – judging by what Google shows us in their results – all 3 backlinks originate from the same domain, though. |