Distributing the Blame: Is it my SEO products or is it Google?

I admit. Before hearing about SEO programs and site promotion trade, I thought Google was cool. I Used Google to look for everything from human beings, to visuals, to current events to obscure things and blindly trusted the results. Then I heard about SEO tools and a new industry centered on website marketing, and my search habits changed. But even before that, having done a bit of reflective reading, I got a hunch that search engines, Google to boot, know far from everything, and divulge to the web community even less than what they know.

My Google travails soon convinced me that Flikr is a higher quality image data bank, that with the assistance of social bookmarking tools I can access interesting current events stories without having to rummage through Google search findings (rummaging is more descriptive than Google search), and people search is best managed by Facebook. It seems like when I search for strange objects on Google, the results are often inaccurate, to put it kindly. Try Googling for SEO programs and other SEO related subjects on Google and you are almost ready to surrender your self-control. I mean, tell me, what’s the relationship between SEO applications and employment webpages or online casinos? Fortunately, in my disappointment.

So when news of best seo tools software and the entire field built around it entered my humble worldview, my qualms about websites landing on first page of Google grew virally. Do they merit to show up on there and who is to blame, Google or webmasters using SEO programs. The moral dilemma is vast. Do I stop using my SEO google ranking or do I seize using Google instead? I concluded that I can’t boycott Google just yet. At least not until the decent competitor enters the game. For now I will keep juggling between Blekko, Google and the above methods to complement the SERP mess that Google is. And, oh,yes, I will continue using my SEO apps.

To be honest, SEO programs is the reason why guys like myself get some visibility on the net. Sophisticated as they are, Google Web spiders are unlikely to find some no-name dude and rank his site highly. In this respect, I am a firm believer in SEO products and organic search. If it was all about the cash, the Fortune entities would destroy me before I knew it. And there are up to one thousand organizations on the Fortune roll! But here is another thing that irks me and other backlink checker users, I am sure. There are guys who buy SEO products and use them to sell shoeson employment sites and the like. What we see is litter that not only lives on the web but is also well valued by search engines.

What is the public reaction to this? People search for SEO application reviews and will instead find junk SERPs. They get disillusioned. So much for the “Internet democracy”. Does this mean that SEO program and service industry is bad? I don’t think so.

The unethical users of SEO apps need to stop bastardizing the Web but it’s like asking hackers to stop cracking the code. The unfortunate thing about it is that black hat SEOs are abusing the prospect to be seen on the Net that is given to the little dude like myself. For now we just have to treat them. One can only hope that Google will put more emphasis on finding the schemers unethically using SEO software, and if Google doesn’t, the next Google will.

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