Link popularity
Link popularity is one of the most crucial factor used
by Yahoo and Google to indicates how important your web
document is. The higher it is the better search engine
result it will achive.
Link popularity is a measure of
the quantity and quality of other web sites that
link to a specific site on the World Wide Web. It is
an example of the move by search engines towards
off-the-page-criteria to determine quality content.
In theory, off-the-page-criteria adds the aspect of
impartiality to search engine rankings.
Link popularity plays an important role in the
visibility of a web site among the top of the search
results. Indeed, some search engines require at
least one or more links coming to a web site,
otherwise they will drop it from their index.
Search engines such as Google use a special
link analysis system to rank web pages. Citations
from other WWW authors help to define a site's
reputation. The philosophy of link popularity is
that important sites will attract many links.
Content-poor sites will have difficulty attracting
any links. Link popularity assumes that not all
incoming links are equal, as an inbound link from a
major directory carries more weight than an inbound
link from an obscure personal home page. In other
words, the quality of incoming links counts more
than sheer numbers of them.
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