Is traffic from digg.com bad?

Discussion in 'Guidelines / Compliance' started by supriyadisw, Oct 11, 2006.

  1. #1
    Is it true that if I get a lot of my traffic from digg.com then I could be banned? When I got dugg, I got a lot of traffic from digg.com. My pageload 17 x from normally. Is my site got "red flag" from google? Need help please..

    Many thanks...
     
    supriyadisw, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  2. medic2424

    medic2424 Peon

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    #2
    Who told you that? I dont think that is true at all.

    Ed
     
    medic2424, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  3. eXe

    eXe Notable Member

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    #3
    Bullshit. Morever, as long as the referrer info is valid you're in the clear. It's "direct visitors" that would be raising google's eyebrows IMO.
     
    eXe, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  4. DLGx

    DLGx Active Member

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    #4
    Why would direct visitors raise eyebrows? I've got a music fan site and community with 75% direct traffic because the same people return every day.
     
    DLGx, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  5. eXe

    eXe Notable Member

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    #5
    Relatively, because proxies & autoclickers don't pass referrer info:)

    Yes and they would be counted as returning visitors.
     
    eXe, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  6. DLGx

    DLGx Active Member

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    #6
    I didn't think that far :p
     
    DLGx, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  7. kpaul

    kpaul Peon

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    #7
    Don't think you'll get banned from Goog just for an increase, but from what i hear Digg traffic is very general and doesn't convert well...
     
    kpaul, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  8. sam2698

    sam2698 Well-Known Member

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    #8
    I see no problem in doing that, has google actually written anything about it? if not then don't worry about it.
     
    sam2698, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  9. visio

    visio Well-Known Member

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    #9
    Most diggers either block ads or ignore them as they have seen them all before. Hardly any will click but the traffic is good especially if you got useful articles.

    And Google will only get suspicious if you suddenly get 5000 clicks one day if yesterday was only 50. The traffic doesn't matter it is the clicks google cares about because they don't pay you for your traffic :p
     
    visio, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  10. eXe

    eXe Notable Member

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    #10
    No, as long as the traffic is legitimate.
     
    eXe, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  11. DLGx

    DLGx Active Member

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    #11
    Should consider the website topic too I think...but I've got no idea how Google really sees different types of traffic.

    Take Myspace bulletin traffic for example, that's often said to be "low quality" and some say you can get banned for it. But if you've got a Myspace related website wouldn't bulletin traffic be among the most targeted traffic you could get?
     
    DLGx, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  12. eXe

    eXe Notable Member

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    #12
    You can't control who links to you or spams about you. As long as the spam doesn't originate from you, it's all cool.
     
    eXe, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  13. DLGx

    DLGx Active Member

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    #13
    As long as you can prove it, and it most cases you can't since Google won't disclose any information whatsoever about why you are being banned. They use the "quilty until proven innocent" policy.
     
    DLGx, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  14. eXe

    eXe Notable Member

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    #14
    You're right but digg traffic isn't "spammy" & if this is to be taken seriously then are we supposed to be afraid of growing our sites' traffic?
     
    eXe, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  15. DLGx

    DLGx Active Member

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    #15
    Well sometimes I wonder, since so many get banned after doing promotion and getting traffic spikes from some sources.
     
    DLGx, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  16. flizz

    flizz Peon

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    #16
    I don't think so, even my blog has been dugg several time.. it OK
     
    flizz, Oct 11, 2006 IP
  17. forumrating

    forumrating Notable Member

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    #17
    traffic is genuine , u should be happy with thr traffic.
     
    forumrating, Oct 12, 2006 IP
  18. bochgoch

    bochgoch Peon

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    #18
    Nothing wrong with digg traffic, just don't expect them to generate ad revenue...I've had a CTR of around 0.05% from such traffic...
     
    bochgoch, Oct 12, 2006 IP
  19. Tyler Banfield

    Tyler Banfield Well-Known Member

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    #19
    Exactly. Because Digg users are part of the "tech crowd," they're pretty much ad blind.
     
    Tyler Banfield, Oct 12, 2006 IP
  20. songchai

    songchai Well-Known Member

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    #20
    Digg! Thanks Reading this topic never let me downs Thanks everyone
     
    songchai, Oct 12, 2006 IP