Google's Matt Cutts latest video
has Google admitting they did and do indeed test their search results
by turning off linkage data as part of their algorithm. Matt Cutts said
the results would be "much much worse" if they did indeed do that in
real life.
That does indeed make sense since Google's core
algorithm was mostly based on links and PageRank and all these years
they spent improving on it and such. They invested so much time and
resources in using links to rank sites that dropping it now would make
for a mess.
It is funny, because a couple weeks ago, we asked you
what you would do if Google dropped backlinks from the algorithm. We
so far have over 300 responses and 34% said they would be very excited,
32% said they'd be curious and 17% said they'd be very concerned.
Here is Matt's video on the topic:
Here is the transcription:
So
we don't have a version like that that is exposed to the public but we
have our own experiments like that internally and the quality looks much
much worse. It turns out backlinks, even though there is some noise and
certainly a lot of spam, for the most part are still a really really
big win in terms of quality of search results.
We played
around with the idea of turning off backlink relevance and at least for
now backlinks relevance still really helps in terms of making sure that
we turn the best, most relevant, most topical set of search results.
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