(EMAILWIRE.COM, August 17, 2013 ) San Francisco, CA -- A new study from Computer and Communications Industry Association noted that search engines are not currently promoting pirated content in an active manner. That means that such engines are being wrong condemned for the ease in which such content is being found.
The study is now challenging the long-held perception that search engines from large to small are actively looking to promote unlicensed content that is being shared across the web. The visibility of such content can be said to be directly related to the capability of the website programmers at utilizing SEO logistics and analytics.
According to the paper, the idea of being able to eliminate unlawful websites from search engines results directly from active attempts is highly flawed. The infringing websites in question actually receive little traffic via the search engines, according to the results.
According to the paper's research, even if all capability to search for such sites was removed, sites like Isohunt would still survive. In their own words, even if all engines were to remove the capability to search for such sites, the pirating sites would survive even a complete search engine ban.
Matt Schruers, who authored the paper, stated: Many music sites now demonstrate an acute awareness of the importance of a strong digital presence, and generally demonstrate effective organic and paid search optimisation.
Schruers continued, saying: Searches for such terms as music downloads indicate that lawful platforms such as Spotify, Last.fm, and Radio aggressively seek to optimise their organic (i.e. natural) search results as well as paid search advertising for such terms, including terms that might otherwise lead to unlicensed sites.
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SearchTheWesternWeb.com (http://www.searchthewesternweb.com/) provides customers with quality local SEO work that will be sure to give any company an edge over competition. Visit the website today and find your way to the top of search engines with efficient and professional work.
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The study is now challenging the long-held perception that search engines from large to small are actively looking to promote unlicensed content that is being shared across the web. The visibility of such content can be said to be directly related to the capability of the website programmers at utilizing SEO logistics and analytics.
According to the paper, the idea of being able to eliminate unlawful websites from search engines results directly from active attempts is highly flawed. The infringing websites in question actually receive little traffic via the search engines, according to the results.
According to the paper's research, even if all capability to search for such sites was removed, sites like Isohunt would still survive. In their own words, even if all engines were to remove the capability to search for such sites, the pirating sites would survive even a complete search engine ban.
Matt Schruers, who authored the paper, stated: Many music sites now demonstrate an acute awareness of the importance of a strong digital presence, and generally demonstrate effective organic and paid search optimisation.
Schruers continued, saying: Searches for such terms as music downloads indicate that lawful platforms such as Spotify, Last.fm, and Radio aggressively seek to optimise their organic (i.e. natural) search results as well as paid search advertising for such terms, including terms that might otherwise lead to unlicensed sites.
About SearchTheWesternWeb.com
SearchTheWesternWeb.com (http://www.searchthewesternweb.com/) provides customers with quality local SEO work that will be sure to give any company an edge over competition. Visit the website today and find your way to the top of search engines with efficient and professional work.
Customer Service
4156676565
news@postpressrelease.com
Source: EmailWire.ComImage may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.
