Grab the widget  Tech Thoughts

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Myspace proxy, basic info. and new year lists

What is a MySpace proxy?

In simple terms, a proxy can be used to visit Web sites anonymously, and may be used to bypass network restrictions on certain sites such as www.myspace.com.
Proxies come in many shapes and forms, but proxy Web sites providing anonymous browsing use HTTP proxy server software. Also known as a Web proxy or CGI proxy, usually these are just Web sites running one of the popular proxy scripts - CGIProxy and PHProxy - or a custom proxy script.

Who uses proxies?

Proxies serve many purposes, so there are many different types of users. Proxies can be used by network administrators for network testing, maintenance, and controlling or monitoring network traffic. Proxies are also used by malicious hackers and coders to hide their tracks. Proxies are often "chained" together to create a very difficult and sometimes impossible trail to follow.
Proxies are also used by regular Internet users who want to protect their privacy, browse the Web from a public computer anonymously, and otherwise protect their Internet usage rights and freedoms.
Many users fall in the grey area. These users have no malicious intent, but might use a proxy to bypass a network rule that they disagree with. Usually such activities include checking email, MySpace, Friendster, and Facebook accounts, visiting Hot or Not, etc. Some users might be brave and dumb enough to look at porn at work or school using a proxy.
While proxies may have a negative connotation to some people, as we can see there are many uses for the technology that proxies provide. Some may wish to stifle the freedom of the Internet with unnecessary privacy restrictions, but some just want to protect their network from abuse, avoid excessive bandwidth consumption, and keep employees productive.
Proxy users should watch their habits, and it is generally not recommended to tick off a network admin. ;) It is also the responsibility of a good network admin to analyze the particular needs of a network and protect the interest of both the management and the users.

Happy new year for proxy users

Here is some good list of proxy for new year-2008.

http://myspace11.info

http://visit1.info

http://bebo1.info


http://seo4expert.com

http://loucongiun.com

http://louconla.com

http://louconlua.com

http://louconngan.com

http://louconngua.com

http://loudangphuong.com

http://louhoanghoi.com

http://louhuyentrang.com

http://loungocha.com


http://louthydong.com

http://facebook7.info

My related post:

Brand new proxy sites for Myspace.com

Proxy sites,badly needed for USA students

Google's gift for 2008

Some of these items are obvious, others are mostly wishful thinking.
You are most welcome to happy new year-2008. The great gifts for you from Google.com



1. Google will try to unify its application and transform them into a big social network. The Maka-Maka project (or Google’s activity stream) will enhance the already existing profiles. If Google doesn’t understand that your Gmail contacts aren’t necessarily your friends, we’ll see a huge privacy backslash.

2. Google should finally go beyond indexing text and start to use image analysis and speech recognition in Google Image Search and Google Video. The NevenVision acquisition should produce visible results in the image search engine and we could see better results for famous people or the option to find similar images.

3. Google won’t give up on universal search, but we’ll see a different interface that separates standard search results from OneBoxes and other additions. Google’s snippets will become smarter and they could include information about authors, locations, concepts.

4. Gmail will add another batch of new features, one of the most important being task management, and will finally go out of beta. Gmail will launch a Google Labs-like site with experimental features that could be added by those who are curious to see the next features before they are officially launched.

5. The first Android phones will be a disappointment, but developers will create a lot of interesting applications that could compensate for the poor designs.

6. Most Google applications will work offline using Google Gears, even if the functionality will be limited. Google Gears will also work on mobile phones and could become a part of Firefox.

7. Google Maps will be redesigned and could include more space for user-generated content. We’ll start to see user’s locations, important events from our area, recommendations from friends. Google Maps will become more personal.

8. OpenSocial won’t work as well as expected and Google will focus on its own social network(s). iGoogle gadgets are about to become social and aggregate data from your contacts.

9. Google will launch a people search engine that gathers data from the web, especially from social networks.

10. Google Books will be more present in search results and Google will start to sell access to the full content of some of the books.

11. One word: sync. At the end of the year, Outlook and most mobile phones will be able to synchronize with Google Calendar and Gmail’s contacts. Google Docs will have plug-ins that let you edit documents in Microsoft Office or OpenOffice and save the changes online. Google Toolbar will integrate Browser Sync and start to synchronize your bookmarks, cookies, passwords and your browser’s history.

12. Multi-faceted search, searching from different points of view (objective information vs positive/negative opinions, official information vs comments from blogs, forums).

13. Google will differentiate commercial search results by integrating data from Google Base. Google will continue to try to promote Checkout, this time by showing small badges next to the search results from sites that accept Google Checkout.

14. Google Talk will move completely online: the embeddable gadget will let you create custom chat rooms, talk with other people and maybe even see them if they have webcams.

15. Picasa Web Albums will add some of the photo editing features from Picasa and will increase the free storage.

16. GDrive will finally launch, but it won’t offer infinite storage or advanced features. It will let you access the files stored in different Google applications and upload new files from a single interface. Storage: 20 GB

I found this post in Advancedengineeringbd.com

AOL destroy Netscape's Future, Leaves Firefox To Battle IE

According to informationweek.com

Development on the browser had recently devolved into a handful of engineers tasked with creating a skinned version of Firefox with a few extensions, AOL said.


AOL on Friday stopped development of the Netscape browser, saying the respected brand that launched the commercial Internet in 1994 had little chance of ever regaining market share against its archrival Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT)'s Internet Explorer.
The Web portal, which took over Netscape Navigator in the $4.2 billion acquisition of Netscape Communications in 1999, said development on the browser had recently devolved into a "handful of engineers tasked with creating a skinned version of Firefox with a few extensions." Firefox is the open source browser developed by the Mozilla Foundation.



"While internal groups within AOL have invested a great deal of time and energy in attempting to revive Netscape Navigator, these efforts have not been successful in gaining market share from Microsoft's Internet Explorer," Tom Drapeau, director of development, said in a Netscape blog post.

While once commanding 90% of the browser market, Netscape Navigator now accounts for less than 1%, and AOL had no interest in spending what it would take to revive the brand. Instead, the company, which was once a subscriber-supported portal, preferred to spend its resources on its transition into an ad-supported Web business. The change left "little room for the size of investment needed to get the Netscape browser to a point many of its fans expect it to be," Drapeau said.

Instead, AOL said it would leave it to the Mozilla Foundation to do battle against IE. When AOL acquired Netscape, the latter company was working on converting its browser into open source software that was later called Mozilla and became the foundation of Firefox.

Mozilla also was the underpinning of version 6 of the Netscape browser released in 2000. The Mozilla Foundation was formed in 2003 and AOL continued to develop versions of Netscape based on the work of the foundation.

"Given AOL's current business focus and the success the Mozilla Foundation has had in developing critically acclaimed products, we feel it's the right time to end development of Netscape-branded browsers, hand the reins fully to Mozilla, and encourage Netscape users to adopt Firefox," Drapeau said.

As of November 2007, IE accounted for 77.35% of the market, and Firefox 16.01%, according to Internet metrics firm Net Applications. Netscape had 0.6%.

AOL planned to release security patches for Netscape Navigator 9, the latest version of the browser, until Feb. 1, 2008. After that, all active product support would end for all versions of the browsers. AOL, however, planned to post a Netscape Archive link for people who wanted to download versions of Netscape without support.

Besides the archive, two other sites offering information would continue to exist: UFAQ and the Netscape Community Forum, AOL said. Netscape.com would also remain live as a general use Internet portal.

The Netscape browser made the commercial Web possible by providing a ubiquitous platform to view and interact with Websites. The browser was based on the Mosaic browser developed by Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina at the University of Illinois. Andreessen and James Clark, former patriarch of SGI, founded Netscape Communications in 1994.

The Web software maker was among the stars in the dot-com era of the mid- to late 1990s, becoming the most successful public stock offering of its time. Netscape Communications forced Microsoft to restructure its entire product line to become Internet compliant.

Microsoft's tactics in grabbing market share from Netscape Navigator with IE was one of the main issues in the U.S. Department of Justice's antitrust cast against Microsoft. The software maker was found to have abused its Windows monopoly and was forced to make changes in its business practices.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

How to get onto the Digg Front Page

Digg is the largest community in web industry for sharing thoughts and ideas. So you can promote your website in this community. It needs some tricks and tips for getting into the frontpage of Digg.com.



Here is a very brief 10 step list:

1.Make a list or a How-to tutorial: If you look at past Digg posts, you will find an endless number of ‘Top 10 Photoshop tricks’ tutorials and ‘Top 30 CSS’ sites lists. To top it all, take this post as an example!

2.Flame the RIAA: Post any story that is negative about the RIAA, it is definitely going onto the front page.

3.Flame the RIAA again!: Flame the RIAA again and make it to the top, twice! You can add in MPAA and Sony too to spice it up a bit!

4.A Witty or Catchy title is always a Bonus: Post your story with a catchy title, this applies not only to Digg but to anything you write. ‘Why this is’ ‘How the RIAA..’, ‘5 reasons…’ are a few examples.

5.Write about Digg and Kevin Ross: Diggers love Digg and just about any news related to Digg and its founder.

6.Write about the evil alliance: Writing anything bad about George bush, Fox News, Wal-Mart, Microsoft will get you there…

7.Write about Google, Apple, Firefox, YouTube, Ubuntu: These are the good-doers in Diggers eyes. Write about them and you will be on the front page (I hope). C’mon how many freaking Ubuntu articles have you seen on the front page?!!

8.Get your friends to digg for you: A friend in need is a friend indeed and this applies to Digg as well. Add top diggers to your friends list and Digg their articles. They might Digg your articles in return and vice-versa. You can also get all your 50+ (MSN) messenger contacts to Digg for you, Hey you can even co-ordinate a massive digging session!

9.Use a fancy profile icon: Looks go a long way. On the predominately white background Digg page, bright coloured Profile Icons stand out. You have more chances of being Dugg if you have a colourful profile icon, as this attracts attention.

10.Last but not the least: Write a ‘10 steps to get onto the Digg Front Page‘ article! Hey, it is worth a try…

Youtube proxy needs not only Thailand but also USA

I think Youtube proxy is badly needed in Thailand because the govt. already banned this site. But the proxy sites for youtube is not only needed in Thailand but also in USA.

Youyube is largely growing community for video sharing and thought sharing. So the young people are mostly wish to browse this site for recreation and enjoyment. But many school and colleges are not allowed this site. For this reason they need proxy sites during study period.



According to Mashable Thailand is going to Sue YouTube…

“Today the situation became even more problematic, with the Thai government saying it has plans to sue YouTube. Sitthichai Phokai-udom, the minister of information and communications technology, told The Associated Press that the government will file suit in a Thai court next week on charges of offending the monarchy. The minister’s statement was remarkably blunt: “Thailand is a fairly small country and not the economic or military powerhouse, so we are at the mercy of the greedy businessman in America”.”




I found some brand new proxy lists which is free and unlock Youtube.com

Here is the lists

http://myspace11.info

http://visit1.info

http://bebo1.info


http://seo4expert.com

http://loucongiun.com

http://louconla.com

http://louconlua.com

http://louconngan.com

http://louconngua.com

http://loudangphuong.com

http://louhoanghoi.com

http://louhuyentrang.com

http://loungocha.com


http://louthuydong.com

http://facebook7.info


My related post:

Youtube proxy for USA schools

Brand new proxy sites for Myspace.com


Recent news:

Video sharing sites are under increasing pressure with the recent bans of YouTube in Thailand for a video insulting the Thai king and DailyMotion in China for unknown reasons. In addition, since December, Iran has blocked access to YouTube and several other "Western" sites. Add to that, access to YouTube, MySpace, and other social sites has been censored in schools and the workplace.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Myspace proxy servers, fast and free

My Space Proxy servers:
some brand new proxy lists which is free and unlock myspace,youtube,facebook, etc.
Here is the lists:


http://myspace11.info

http://visit1.info

http://bebo1.info


http://seo4expert.com

http://loucongiun.com

http://louconla.com

http://louconlua.com

http://louconngan.com

http://louconngua.com

http://loudangphuong.com

http://louhoanghoi.com

http://louhuyentrang.com

http://loungocha.com


http://louthuydong.com

http://facebook7.info


Proxy servers have three major purposes:
1. Filtering and Firewalling
2. Sharing of connection
3. Caching
These features of proxy servers are particularly important to the corporate and other large networks. They work at the application layer which is the seventh layer in the OSI model. They are not as easy to implement and use as the common firewalls. The functionality of the proxy server for each of the protocol like HTTP, SOCKS must be downloaded individually. Nevertheless proxy servers improve performance and security. Firewalls by themselves cannot do that. Proxy servers also have a greater filtering capacity when compared to the ordinary routers. Using proxy servers to cache can improve the network in three ways; network bandwidth is conserved hence improving the scalability, response time is reduced, and it increases the accessibility to web pages even if the source is offline.

There are also some disadvantages of caching using a proxy server. First of them is the bottleneck that may form because of the multitudes of client requests. Also there is proxy hierarchy whereby each request goes through levels in hierarchy when the request is missed in the first level. Refreshed pages are not well cached using proxy servers. There is also measurement uncertainty that is introduced by the proxy servers into the Internet.

Other than HTTP proxy servers work well with:
1 SHTTP – Secure Hyper Text Transfer Protocol
2 FTP – File Transfer Protocol
3 SOCKS – It is a protocol of firewall security.
4 WAIS – Wide Area Indexing Service

If a browser has to be manually specified, host identifier and port number must be defined. Host identifier is either the IP address or the network name of the host. The TCP/IP port is the port number that the server uses to act on the client requests. Special configuration files are now being used to automatically configure the proxy servers.

Some of the common types of proxy servers are web, intercepting, transparent, open, reverse, and split proxy servers. Web proxies filter web content that is offensive. Intercepting proxies are used in large organizations to ease administration and ensure that network use policies are abided by. Transparent proxy is similar to web proxy but is used only for emails. Open proxies accept connections from all IP addresses. Reverse proxies are installed along with web servers. Split proxies are two proxy servers that are installed in two computers.


My related post:

Brand new proxy sites for Myspace.com

Proxy sites, badly needed for USA students

Youtube.com, Now need proxy for schools and colleges.

Google's Knol experiment to rival Wikipedia, Is it true or not?

According to News.com:

Last night on the official Google blog, Udi Manber, vice president of engineering, announced that Google is testing a publishing platform called Knol.

It's being compared to Wikipedia and Mahalo. While it's a somewhat different take on knowledge collection, these comparisons are apt.


Actually we collect some information from different web and we come to know that-
Knol is a wiki-like platform. Authors can create topics, and there are tools to interlink articles and content, but as Manber says, an article, or "knol," is "just a Web page." Where it differs from a wiki is its focus on the author. All knols will highlight who wrote them.


Wikipedia is a collaborative system. There is no author listed on a wiki page because a page may have many authors (if you want to, you can divine who said what on the history pages).

Since Knol pages will be authored, users won't, presumably, be able to dive in and edit another page. They'll be able to submit edits to the author for approval, though. So much for open collaboration. But as a platform for authors who might want to make some money from their work, it's a better bet (Knol will allow authors to monetize their pages as they see fit).

Purists may think that since Google is in the business of monetizing content via advertising, it should not compete with other publishing platforms. However, this is not the first time that Google has gotten into this business.

Blogger, of course, is Google's biggest success in text-publishing platforms. But Google also experimented with its own database, Google Base, in which it not only indexes the information but also stores it. And then there's YouTube.

I would compare Knol to Blogger, and eventually, I think it will have Digg-like elements. Knol is like Blogger because it's a personal publishing platform. It's all about giving authors a platform for writing. It's just a like a blog, but much more structured. If you like a Knoller, you'll likely want to read more written by that person, or even subscribe to his work.

It could become Digg-like, in that multiple Knol pages on the same topic will compete with each other. And while the Manber's post hinted that the arbiter of Knol quality will be Google search rankings, I cannot imagine that there won't, at some point, be both a social network of Knol users and a main page that ranks the most popular Knol pages by votes, page views, discussion flow, or other group metrics.

At this point, based only on the official blog post, Knol looks like a solid end-user publishing platform. I strongly doubt that it will put much of a hurt on Wikipedia, since its author focus makes it much the antithesis of the open, community-driven wiki model. Knol looks more like a Google version of About.com, Mahalo, or Squidoo.

So this system will be a great challenge for wiki, no doubt. But we will look forward and see what will happen in next.

Friday, December 14, 2007

A brand new proxy list for facebook

About Facebook:

Facebook is a social networking website which allows members to create profiles only visible to their geographic networks and approved friends.It is a huge community to exchange knowledge and information in the web industry.



Facebook proxy:

Many schools and workplaces block Facebook from their list of approved internet sites because they try to keep people doing only productive things while at work or school.

Well here at FacebookProfile.com we want you to visit Facebook as much as possible, so if you MUST access Facebook.


A proxy is an internet connection that surfs the web FOR you. You simply tell it where you want to go, it gets the information from the website and sends it to you. The network you're on never knows which site you're accessing. Here's a list of sites you can use which offer proxy service. Keep in mind, a lot of schools and workplaces block proxy websites also.

Suggested proxy list:

1. Facebook 1

The only truly reliable and ultra fast Facebook Proxy, not blocked on any networks and works better for Facebook then any other web proxy!

2. Facebook 2

This is a proxy geared specifically towards loading a blocked Facebook page. Visit the site and you're ready to browse Facebook.

3. Faceboo 3

If your school or workplace blocks proxy sites, this one might work because it's a subdomain site not specifically for proxies. If some of the other proxy sites are blocked, give this one a try.

4. Facebook 4

This means the below proxies may not work from your school or workplace, we suggest using SneakAnon.com - Facebook Proxy above as it is an ultrafast and anonymous proxy.

5. Facebook 5

Good proxy site. Lots of advertisements on the main page, but that's the price to pay for free proxy surfing.

6. Facebook 6

Access social networking sites using PageWash. Hopefully will bypass your intranet firewall.

7. Facebook 7

Get this proxy site for quick and fast surf for Facebook.com. I think you will get benefitted to browse it.

8. Facebook 8

Great and trusted Facebook Proxy site.

My related post:

Brand new proxy sites for Myspace.com

Proxy sites, badly needed for USA students

Youtube.com, Now need proxy for schools and colleges.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

How does Google collect and rank results for your website?

Recent study and analysis , I found some new concept about the page rank and search engine optimization. Here I publish how you come to know about Googlebot or spider will collect data from your website. This article will help you a lot to get some nice information about this important topics.

Crawling and Indexing

A lot of things have to happen before you see a web page containing your Google search results. Our first step is to crawl and index the billions of pages of the World Wide Web. This job is performed by Googlebot, our 'spider,' which connects to web servers around the world to fetch documents. The crawling program doesn't really roam the web; it instead asks a web server to return a specified web page, then scans that web page for hyperlinks, which provide new documents that are fetched the same way. Our spider gives each retrieved page a number so it can refer to the pages it fetched.

Our crawl has produces an enormous set of documents, but these documents aren't searchable yet. Without an index, if you wanted to find a term like civil war, our servers would have to read the complete text of every document every time you searched.

So the next step is to build an index. To do this, we 'invert' the crawl data; instead of having to scan for each word in every document, we juggle our data in order to list every document that contains a certain word. For example, the word 'civil' might occur in documents 3, 8, 22, 56, 68, and 92, while the word 'war' might occur in documents 2, 8, 15, 22, 68, and 77.

Once we've built our index, we're ready to rank documents and determine how relevant they are. Suppose someone comes to Google and types in civil war. In order to present and score the results, we need to do two things:
Find the set of pages that contain the user's query somewhere
Rank the matching pages in order of relevance

We've developed an interesting trick that speeds up the first step: instead of storing the entire index on one very powerful computer, Google uses hundreds of computers to do the job. Because the task is divided among many machines, the answer can be found much faster. To illustrate, let's suppose an index for a book was 30 pages long. If one person had to search for several pieces of information in the index, it would take at least several seconds for each search. But what if you gave each page of the index to a different person? Thirty people could search their portions of the index much more quickly than one person could search the entire index alone. Similarly, Google splits its data between many machines to find matching documents faster.

How do we find pages that contain the user's query? Let's return to our civil war example. The word 'civil' was in documents 3, 8, 22, 56, 68, and 92; the word 'war' was in documents 2, 8, 15, 22, 68, and 77. Let's write the documents across the page and look for those with both words.

civil 3 8 22 56 68 92
war 2 8 15 22 68 77
both words 8 22 68

Arranging the documents this way makes clear that the words 'civil' and 'war' appear in three documents (8, 22, and 68). The list of documents that contain a word is called a 'posting list,' and looking for documents with both words is called 'intersecting a posting list.' (A fast way to intersect two posting lists is to walk down both at the same time. If one list skips from 22 to 68, you can skip ahead to document 68 on the other list as well.)


Ranking Results

Now we have the set of pages that contain the user's query somewhere, and it's time to rank them in terms of relevance. Google uses many factors in ranking. Of these, the PageRank algorithm might be the best known. PageRank evaluates two things: how many links there are to a web page from other pages, and the quality of the linking sites. With PageRank, five or six high-quality links from websites such as www.cnn.com and www.nytimes.com would be valued much more highly than twice as many links from less reputable or established sites.

But we use many factors besides PageRank. For example, if a document contains the words 'civil' and 'war' right next to each other, it might be more relevant than a document discussing the Revolutionary War that happens to use the word 'civil' somewhere else on the page. Also, if a page includes the words 'civil war' in its title, that's a hint that it might be more relevant than a document with the title '19th Century American Clothing.' In the same way, if the words 'civil war' appear several times throughout the page, that page is more likely to be about the civil war than if the words only appear once.



As a rule, Google tries to find pages that are both reputable and relevant. If two pages appear to have roughly the same amount of information matching a given query, we'll usually try to pick the page that more trusted websites have chosen to link to. Still, we'll often elevate a page with fewer links or lower PageRank if other signals suggest that the page is more relevant. For example, a web page dedicated entirely to the civil war is often more useful than an article that mentions the civil war in passing, even if the article is part of a reputable site such as Time.com.

Once we've made a list of documents and their scores, we take the documents with the highest scores as the best matches. Google does a little bit of extra work to try to show snippets – a few sentences – from each document that highlight the words that a user typed. Then we return the ranked URLs and the snippets to the user as results pages.

As you can see, running a search engine takes a lot of computing resources. For each search that someone types in, over 500 computers may work together to find the best documents, and it all happens in under half a second.

You can follow the link to learn more:
http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/


This article will originated from Here

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Blogspot portal for myspace proxy




Myspaceproxy:

The school blocks Myspace.com because they don't want you wasting time going to MySpace. So, let the other kids use the computers for doing actual learning, save the Myspace for when you get home, and stop wasting my tax dollars on trying to find ways around sites that are blocked for a reason.

Proxy servers marketed for the MySpace community are numerous and advertised widely on the Internet. These servers tend to incur frequent outages and enjoy only a short lifetime on the Web, as many owners have difficulty maintaining and do not anticipate the high cost of operating them.




Our Myspace Proxy list:

http://myspace11.info

http://visit1.info

http://bebo1.info


http://seo4expert.com

http://loucongiun.com

http://louconla.com

http://louconlua.com

http://louconngan.com

http://louconngua.com

http://loudangphuong.com

http://louhoanghoi.com

http://louhuyentrang.com

http://loungocha.com


http://louthuydong.com

http://facebook7.info




My recent posts are very popular last week. Already 1000 pageview are made by different search engines and social networking sites. So I feel a simlple concept of proxy that my blogspot is a port that people come here to visit proxy sites. This proxy list is brand new and latest designed by some web masters.

My related post:

Brand new proxy sites for Myspace.com

Proxy sites, badly needed for USA students

Youtube.com, Now need proxy for schools and colleges.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Proxy sites, badly needed for USA students

Last few years many social networking sites such as – myspace.com, facebook.com, orkut.com, hi5.com, youtube.com, bebo.com etc are very popular specially school and college students in USA, UK, Canada. The students are browsing these sites during their study period. So many students engage surfing net instead of studying. As a result their studies hamper a lot. Their guardians are anxious about this matter.

In this situation, most of the schools and colleges ban these sites in their institutions. So the students now can’t browse these sites directly. The web masters are given a solution to browse these sites through proxies.

The proxy sites give a great opportunity to enter these forbidden or banned sites. Here I suggest some brand new proxy sites which are working well and good. These sites are fast and free.

Suggested proxy sites:

some brand new proxy sites which unlock myspace.com, facebook.com,bebo.com, youtube.com and so on:


http://myspace11.info

http://visit1.info

http://bebo1.info


http://seo4expert.com

http://loucongiun.com

http://louconla.com

http://louconlua.com

http://louconngan.com

http://louconngua.com

http://loudangphuong.com

http://louhoanghoi.com

http://louhuyentrang.com

http://loungocha.com


http://louthuydong.com

http://facebook7.info


My related post:

Brand new proxy sites for Myspace.com

Youtube.com, Now need proxy for schools and colleges.

Proxy sites and its importance for USA students


Recent news:

Video sharing sites are under increasing pressure with the recent bans of YouTube in Thailand for a video insulting the Thai king and DailyMotion in China for unknown reasons. In addition, since December, Iran has blocked access to YouTube and several other "Western" sites. Add to that, access to YouTube, MySpace, and other social sites has been censored in schools and the workplace.

Monday, December 10, 2007

New and improved AdSense products, Wow !

Google recently adds some new products for their adsense users. These are-


AdSense for mobile now available

If you currently run a website designed for mobile phones, or are planning to set one up, you can now monetize your site with Google AdSense for mobile. Similar to AdSense for content, AdSense for mobile automatically serves targeted ads to your mobile webpages, enabling you to earn money while providing useful information to your users. If you'd like to learn more about the specifics of the program,check out the policies and requirements. Or to get started right away, simply sign in to your AdSense account, visit the AdSense Setup tab, and select AdSense for mobile as the product.

Announcing Video Units

We're excited to announce video units, a new way for publishers to enrich their sites with premium, relevant video content on an embedded YouTube player. We know one of your top goals is to enhance your users' experience, so video units allow you to choose which video categories to target to your site and which to exclude, as well as to customize the color scheme and layout of the YouTube player. Plus, the ads provided with the videos are highly targeted and non-intrusive. If you're looking to monetize and enrich your site with premium video content, learn more about video units or simply log in to your account to get started.

Choose your advertisers with Referrals 2.0

All publishers can now take advantage of the newest improvement to our referrals program: cost-per-action ads from our pool of AdWords advertisers. In addition to referring your users to our Google products, you can pick and choose from the many great products and services offered by our advertisers. You can match the content of your site – and your users' interests – by selecting the specific ads that you want to show on your page. Even better, you can place up to three referrals ads on your page in addition to your standard AdSense for Content ad units.

Get your ads in shape with rounded corners

You probably noticed the launch of our redesigned ad formats earlier this year, but did you know that you can customize the shape of the ad unit further by selecting between square, slightly rounded, or very rounded corners? To get started with these new shapes, visit the 'AdSense Setup' tab in your account. We suggest that you choose the corner style that best matches the look and feel of your sites.


Updated ads are just a click away

All AdSense accounts – including yours – were recently upgraded to take advantage of our new ad management feature. Using this new feature, you can store details about your AdSense unit, including ad size, colors, and channel settings, on our servers. That means you can update and change settings for your AdSense unit from within your account, without needing to change the ad code on your page. Want to change the border color of that banner on your site? Just use our new ad management feature to switch the color, hit Save, and presto - that AdSense unit on your site has a brand-new border.

To get started with this new feature, just check out our guide to 'mastering ad management' or head to the Get Ads sub-tab under the AdSense Setup tab in your account.

I recieved a mail from Google adsense proggram which is published for your better understanding about this proggram.

You will also learn a lot in Google.com/adsense.

You need to learn the policies of google adsense. So read the following topics:

Google AdSense Program Policies

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Youtube.com, Now need proxy for schools and colleges.



Youtube.com is a huge community to share video in this web industry. So it is badly needed for young people to enjoy more and more. But the main problem is that many schools and colleges ban this site in their network.

By using a proxy website; however, instead of typing in the address for Youtube you enter the URL for the proxy web server. On most such servers, you will then see a box where you can enter the URL for the site that you really want to visit and through the proxy web server you will be taken right to it. The filtering system on the computer doesn’t catch it because as far as it’s concerned you are visiting the proxy web site. The site you wish to see is loaded onto the proxy’s server. The server will then communicate with the site you want to visit and that is communicated to your browser.

Not only can you access pages that would normally be restricted but you can also do so anonymously without any fear of leaving details about your and the server that might would have otherwise been collected during your visit. There is no trace of your IP address left and no one will be able to see what you have been doing. In a nutshell the proxy server takes the place of your IP address.

Whether you’re having problems because of a restricted network, a firewall or filtering program you can safely and easily access any site that you wish without leaving any details regarding your visit or having any concerns about spyware being downloaded to your computer. Rather ingenious,

If someone has a filter blocking you from seeing certain sites on your computer (like, if you are a kid and your parents are protecting you with an internet filter), then good for them!
Otherwise, if you are an adult, explain what you mean by "proxy" to "unblock sites". If you are using a computer that belongs to your parents, or has administrator privileges set up under their discretion, there is nothing you can do to override that, other than talking to them about it. If you are talking about computer lingo in unblocking questionable sites that your computer warns you about, you should pay attention to those warnings....they are designed to protect your files and your computer from damage.......so be more specific......



Suggested proxy sites:

Here I suggest some brand new proxy sites which unlock Youtube.com, Myspace.com, Facebook.com,Bebo.com,and so on:

http://myspace11.info

http://visit1.info

http://bebo1.info


http://seo4expert.com

myspace4u.biz

myspace4usa.biz

myspace4you.biz

myspace4all.biz


webworldbd.com


http://facebook7.info


My related post:

Brand new proxy sites for Myspace.com


Recent news:

Video sharing sites are under increasing pressure with the recent bans of YouTube in Thailand for a video insulting the Thai king and DailyMotion in China for unknown reasons. In addition, since December, Iran has blocked access to YouTube and several other "Western" sites. Add to that, access to YouTube, MySpace, and other social sites has been censored in schools and the workplace.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Targeting Ads on Social networking sites

Social Networking sites are now so popular that almost most of online users are using this sites. I collect this articles and publish for my community people.

An aunt of mine joined a social network recently to keep up with her kids and grandkids online. It didn't take her kin long to point out she'd provided an erroneous birth year in her profile. It wasn't an attempt to appear younger than she was, she said. Unsure of how it would be used, she didn't want to provide her real information to the site.

It was a valid point. Social networks continue to introduce new targeting options that mark the first step toward putting virtually all non-personally-identifiable profile information into play for marketers. This week, MySpace introduced advanced targeting capabilities designed to improve ad performance, allowing advertisers to more easily pick and choose their desired audience groups.

As reported by ClickZ News, this second phase of MySpace's HyperTargeting system, first introduced in July, will let marketers target ad messages based on hundreds of highly specific subcategories of interests, such as types of horror movies, as expressed within user profiles. The site says plans are also in the works to provide access to other profile information, including indicators of user life stages. I can almost hear the buzz of anticipation among consumer packaged goods (CPG) beauty brands, pharma products, and financial services companies.

Just the other day, rival network Facebook launched a new advertising platform that also delivers increased targeting capabilities through a format called Social Ads. When site members interact with a branded Facebook page, their actions -- along with their profile photo -- can be featured in a Social Ad and distributed to their Facebook friends based on targeting criteria, like gender, geographic region, and, of course, age.

Contextual Perfection or Crossing the Line?

Every buyer and planner I've spoken with about the MySpace development is palpably excited. Some question why it took so long to arrive at what seems to be an obvious and rational place. Yet there's some concern about how social network users will react. Social sites are all about its users. At first blush, HyperTargeting seems to serve advertisers' interests first.

Interactive marketers have always struggled with the issue of consumer privacy and the backlash that invariably accompanies campaigns that cross the line. Years of planning (and some convincing from behavioral and contextual targeting firms) has led us to conclude consumers respond better to relevant ads. If they must be exposed to advertising (and, thankfully, many now understand they must), at least make it contextually relevant to their interests and needs.

MySpace has concluded the same thing, according to) parent company Fox Interactive Media's (FIM's) Adam Bain. Bain says a year was spent creating and studying user panels in an effort to predict consumer response. Sure enough, consumers indicated ads should be, at the very least, relevant and engaging -- exactly what HyperTargeting is designed to ensure.

Reports indicate that next year Facebook plans to use algorithms to determine how receptive users are to ads relating to specific interests and activities in general, as well as those of their friends. The ads won't necessarily be contextually targeted at first, but they'll give the site an indication of how best to target future messages.

In the meantime, let's not forget these are social networks we're dealing with. They're online media equalizers, delivering perhaps the greatest range of demographics and psychographics of any Web-based medium. Consumers shouldn't be surprised by these developments, but then these aren't the type of consumers who are familiar with what goes on behind the scenes, where advertising is crafted and delivered. It should be obvious that social sites are eager to profit from the millions of users and scores of data they have access to, and that advertisers, knowing the importance of contextually relevant ads, are keen on locating potential customers and delivering messaging that's of interest to them. But convincing our target users of these facts will surely take some doing.

We're much closer to the coveted image of the ultimate contextual ad seen in "Minority Report" than most consumers know. It will take some getting used to, but ultimately technology that may initially be perceived as intrusive could just become a site user's greatest ally.

This article is written by Tessa Wegert:

Tessa Wegert is an interactive media strategist with Enlighten, a digital marketing, Web development, and e-business consulting firm ranked as one of the nation's top 50 interactive agencies by "Advertising Age." Clients include Jergens, John Frieda, Discovery Kids, Hunter Douglas, Comerica, the Food Network, and Olympic Paints and Stains. Originally from Montreal, Tessa has worked in online media buying and planning, marketing, and copywriting in both the U.S. and Canada since 1999. She is an active freelance writer specializing in interactive marketing and co-owner of Servassist Online, a consumer automotive service and maintenance resource and dealership marketing tool.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Proxy sites and its importance for USA students

In USA many popular sites are restricted for students of schools and colleges. They dont browse myspace, facebook, bebo, youtube etc at their schools and colleges in recreation period. So they need proxy sites to unlock myspace,facebook,bebo,youtube and so on.

A web proxy is becoming more and more important in todays internet. Schools and Companys in USA tend to block sites pretty quickly nowadays.It is especially irritating when the ban is directed towards just a few websites and not every website in that category. Web Proxys might be able to sneak past this policies and display the site in your browser even though it is banned in the network.

How do web proxys work ?

A network bans a website either by its IP, its name or part of its name. A web proxy makes only shows its own address to the network and not the actual destination of the user. The admin of the network will think everything is fine and you are free to reach the site that is banned. The only thing that might happen is that the admin is banning the web proxy as well, but this is not a big deal either. Hundreds of web proxys exist, just switch to a new one and you are ready to visit the banned site again.

Setup your own Web Proxy:

Let us assume that all proxy websites have been banned in your network, you can´t find a single web proxy that is still working. Your best choice is to create your own web proxy at an address that only you know. All you need is the php web proxy poxy and some webspace with php to upload it to. Search google for free webspace php and you should find some hosts that allow you to use php and upload your web proxy to them.

You can alternativly use a cgi web proxy which needs a webspace with cgi enabled.

Web Proxy List:

Please not that the list does not display if the webproxy is able to handle scripts, I did not find a reliable way to make a test for all languages out there, therefor this has not been added to the list. I also removed websites that loaded slowly, displayed errors or forced you to click on an ad before you could use the service.

It is most likely that the name “proxy” might have been banned as well, try using web proxys that do not have proxy i their url, this might help.


Suggested proxy sites:

Here I suggest some brand new proxy sites which unlock myspace.com, facebook.com,bebo.com, youtube.com and so on:

http://myspace11.info

http://visit1.info

http://bebo1.info


http://seo4expert.com

http://loucongiun.com

http://louconla.com

http://louconlua.com

http://louconngan.com

http://louconngua.com

http://loudangphuong.com

http://louhoanghoi.com

http://louhuyentrang.com

http://loungocha.com


http://louthuydong.com

http://facebook7.info


My related post:

Brand new proxy sites for Myspace.com

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Website is an Asset Or a Liability, Take a look

Website is an address on world wide web. So noboby denys its importance in presents.
Websites were the wave of the future, and the dream of transitioning to conducting business onlíne filled our heads with visions of a revolution in the way commerce was conducted. With a website, a company could reach clients and interact with potential customers on a global scale. A website was indicative of a company's technological prowess, symbolic of the desire to innovate and evolve with developments in the industry.

We all know that we need a website, but many of us think that simply having one is enough. In fact, there is research indicating that many firms with an online presence haven't touched their websites in years. They haven't spent any time improving functionality and appearance, and they have yet to consider the basics of website usability and the inherent potential of search engine optimization. Of course, we all recognize by now that having a website is an essential business asset, if it's done correctly. It's easy to see that if your site is an outdated eyesore, it becomes a liability that hurts you more than it helps you. Conversely, a well-designed site can make all the difference. It's the first place users go to research your products and services, serves as a lead generator, a CRM tool, and even to make purchases.

So this must leave you wondering: Is my website an asset or a liability? By answering the following questíons, you can find out if it's time for an overhaul or just some simple changes. Or maybe your site doesn't need any work at all. Ready to find out?

Home Page
Can visiting users tell immediately who you are and what you offer?
Is your site organized in a clear fashion that promotes navigation?
Is your home page an information destination or just a messy landing page?
Does your home page give a good first impression that entices users to clickthrough your links?

Performance Issues

Do your images, videos, and pages load quickly?
Does your site utilize clean, un-bloated code?
Does your site have a "search" function? If so, is it fast and useful?
Have you performed quality assurance testing to ensure your site looks the same across different browsers?

Content Is King

Is your content written clearly and persuasively? Does it speak to your target market?
Have you included useful and relevant resources like case studies, white papers, articles, or links?
Does your content effectively describe your products, services, and benefits?
Is your content keyword focused to cater to users and search engines alike?

Links & Navigation

First and foremost: Do all your links work?
Are your links clearly marked?
Do your links utilize descriptive and enticing anchor text?
Is your navigation menu or framework consistent throughout your site?
Does your navigation menu provide access to your entire site?

Critical Pages

Is there a top-level page that describes your products and services?
Do you have an "About Us" page to describe your company?
Is the "Contact Us" page clear, informative, and thorough?
Do you have a page where users can ask questíons or answer their own?
Do you have a Testimonials section?
Do you have a blog that you update frequently?
Do you have social bookmarking buttons to take advantage of Web 2.0 technologies?

Usability

Is your site organized so that information is easy to find?
Do you have a site map that wireframes this organizational structure and links to all your pages?
Is your site "user-friendly?"
Is your type scannable, easy to read, and written for the web?
Do you utilize bullets, headlines, and other stylistic elements to organize and present content?
Do you have calls to action that prompt users to take desired actions?
Are you using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) to control the layout of the site?

Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

Is your site search engine friendly?
Have you optimized your site for specific and relevant keywords?
Have you acquired a network of high-quality, relevant links?
Have you utilized online PR or social media marketing for its SEO benefits?
Does your navigation menu provide access to your entire site?

Now that you've answered all of these questíons, you need to decide what to do next. Start with some competitve analysis to see what your competitors are doing and what you need to do to catch up. Then, survey users to see what they think and act upon that feedback; don't wait, evaluate and reciprocate.

So make as many changes as you can to improve your website, turning it back into a business asset instead of a liability, and watch as your web presence creates leads and ultimately sales that impact your bottom line.


This article is written Mr. Nick Yorchak who is an SEO expert and Search Engine Marketing Specialist at Fusionbox

Find more articles. Go-http://www.goarticles.com

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Google Readies for Action, Learn here

Google.com is a global online huge organization in web industry.

In the beginning, there was cost per impression: You, the online marketer, paid for the audience of a Web page. And it was good for the publishers, but only okay for the advertisers, because you couldn't be sure those people were actively interested in your ad.

Then came cost per click, and it was better, because you could tell when your ad had motivated viewers to take one specific action, a click. That put you that much closer to the true prospective customer. Problem was, many of those clicks didn't convert, and you weren't in the business of buying clicks.

Then too, a new problem cropped up: Distinguishing real interest in a product or service from simulated interest by perpetrators looking to turn a buck through fraudulent clicks on their site's ads.

Now cost per action is on the horizon, offering you the prospect of not having to pay until and unless a visitor completes whatever conversion you decide you want from advertising: a purchase, a content or software download, a site registration—whatever makes the most sense for your business and your online campaign.

Have we reached Nirvana?

Maybe not quite, but several ad networks have decided that the time is right to offer advertisers the chance to include pay-per-action marketing in their online mixes. Snap.com began offering the model in early 2005, and Turn.com, launched last year with cost per action (CPA) as part of its value proposition.

Now the action-oriented model is getting strong new validation from Google's announcement a few weeks ago that it is expanding the CPA beta test it has been running since mid-2006. Rightly or wrongly, Google is the pacesetter in performance-based online marketing ("BusinessWeek" scare covers aside), and what rolls out of the Mountain View, CA, Googleplex may well crop up among the offering of the other engines too.

Here's how Rob Kniaz, Google's Pay-Per-Action product manager, explained the format in a March 20 post on the company's Inside AdWords blog: "You'll define an action, set up conversion tracking, and create ads that publishers in the Google content network can then choose to place in new ad units on their site... Publishers choose specific pay-per-action ads that are relevant to their site and can place them in a new ad unit on their page... You determine a fixed amount that youíd like to pay for a completed action based on the value of that action to your business. You'll only pay when that action is completed, not for a click or an impression. For example, you may wish to pay $1 every time a user fills out a lead form on your site and $5 when a purchase is made."

The salient points here are that the CPA ads will only be tested on Googleís AdSense network of Web publisher sites, where the company has been running mostly contextual ads. Those AdSense publishers can choose whether or not to accept Google CPA ads, and may choose to deliver pay-per-click ads instead if they think those will be a more profitable use of their ad inventory.

As to format, the beta test will allow marketers to deliver text-based ads, images or a new "text link" product. The latter is an in-line ad unit that looks like a regular hyperlink in text content. When a user mouses over it, a pop-up balloon headed "Ads by Google" appears; click on that, and you're taken to a landing page paid for by the advertiser.

In setting up a Google CPA account, advertisers can list as many actions as theyíre willing to pay for, either choosing from a list of predefined conversions from Google or writing their own. They have to provide a description of those actions for display to Web publishers, including the amount theyíre willing to pay. And since visitors may sometimes take an action long after viewing a CPA ad, advertisers will be responsible for conversions that happen up to 30 days after a CPA ad was clicked.

The CPA ads will also depend on Googleís AdWords conversion tracking analytics; after all, Google and the publishers will need to be able to tell that an action has taken place. Advertisers will get a conversion tracking account (if they don't already have one) and then add a small amount of code to their Web sites once theyíve defined the actions they want to buy and what they're willing to pay for each one.

Right now the beta test is available only to U.S. advertisers, and participants must have an AdWords account. Volunteers can sign up at http://services.google.com/ads_inquiry/payperaction and will be admitted to the test on "a rolling basis over the next few months," according to Google's CPA ad FAQ.

So why is Google expanding this beta test now?

"Google is trying to remove potential barriers to advertisers trying to use its contextual network," says Rob Murray, president of search marketing firm iProspect. "A contextual network is only as good as the relevance of the sites in it and the quality of the audience. [Google's CPA test] gives advertisers a risk-free entry to try its contextual network."

Compared with the numbers advertising on the big engines' search networks, both Google and Yahoo! have seen their contextual networks exert much less pull. That's partly because many advertisers consider their ads better targeted—and their budgets better spent—chasing in-market consumers on the search results pages than simply latching on to keywords on Web content pages.

It also hasnít helped that Google and Yahoo! have been pretty unwilling to reveal the full roster of sites in their content networks or to let advertisers specify which sites and pages their ads will appear on. (Google said in a press report earlier this month that it would begin letting advertisers target specific contextual sites in the future.) The obscurity has tended to foster a belief that their content networks contain a few marquee Websites surrounded by a very high proportion of low-traffic, low-quality sites, including many parked domains and arbitraged "Made for AdSense" sites.

While advertisers are still waiting to get greater visibility into Googleís contextual advertising milieu, Murray says, the company has opted to give them more control over the advertising outcome by letting them set the conversions they want and pay only for those. "It's part of a natural progression of online advertising, from search to contextual and from clicks to action, all giving advertisers growing control over where their messaging is displayed. Ultimately that evolution should yield greater results."

Some observers suggested that Google's broadened support for pay-per-action ads was directed at reducing the chance of click fraud, which reports have suggested is a larger problem on content networks than in search results pages. Murray doesn't think that was a prime motive for pushing CPA ads, but he allows that the per-action model will make fraud harder to perpetrate. Fraudsters can still simulate the actions advertisers are willing to pay for, such as clicking on a download button or giving a fake e-mail registration; but it wonít be the swift one-click process it is now.

"I'd hesitate to say that this is going to do a lot to prevent click fraud, but the nature of the business model makes fraud less relevant," he says.

Kevin Lee, cofounder/executive chairman of Did-It Search Marketing, says Google is probably also motivated by an impulse to poach some of the CPA ad business its network publishers are currently giving to affiliate networks—the original pay-per-action players from the Internet's early days. "If you were Google and you looked at your current publisher set to analyze what else you see on those pages displaying AdSense, you'd see banner ads or rich media ads served by ad networks such as ValueClick Advertising.com or Blue Lithium," he says. "You'd also see banners, text links, or other ad inventory coming from a performance-based [affiliate] network like Commission Junction or LinkShare."

Publishers often have a lot of screen real estate to fill, but theyíre prevented from using more than two Google AdSense cost-per-click units on a given Web page, Lee says. CPA ads would let Google offer another company ad product to publishers with whom it already has relationships.

It's not clear at this point whether the CPA ads would count against the AdSense ad cap. Lee believes they will be in addition to the two-ads-per-page limit, particularly in the case of the new text-link format.

"I think Google feels that experimenting with another ad format can only be positive," Lee says. "They can say, 'We already have our existing ad networks and CPC ads going like gangbusters, but we understand some marketers to have a pure performance-based deal as either a portion or all of their marketing mixócost per acquisition or cost per lead.' This is an interesting way of trialing that."

Murray's firm has some clients who are enrolled in the Google CPA test, and Lee says Did-It is talking to some clients to gauge their interest in taking part. Other agencies have held off, either waiting for the inevitable bugs to show themselves or out of concern that letting Google track the clickpath from beginning to end may be revealing too much to the platform that already gets the lionís share of performance-ad dollars.

"The only way the CPA model works for Google is if advertisers are prepared to share that back-end data with Google," says Peter Hershberg, managing partner of search marketing agency Reprise Media. "I think the larger advertisers out there, and certainly the advertisers who are working with search engine marketing firms are going to be reluctant to do that."

Reprise was offered the opportunity to enroll clients in the Google CPA beta test, but Hershberg says the agency declined because of reservations about giving any search engine access to that customer data. "I think there's a conflict of interest in telling the person who's charging you for the inventory how effective your advertising is," he says.

Lee points to another issue with the Google CPA product, at least for advertisers who also make aggressive use of affiliate marketing: the prospect of double counting. If a visitor goes to your Website through a Google CPA ad one day, picking up a tracking pixel from that path, and then lands on your site two days later through a link from Commission Junction, thereby acquiring another tracking pixel before making a purchase, both Google and the affiliate network may wind up charging you for the same action.

"That's a risk associated with a siloed tracking system such as the one Google uses," Lee says. "The most-aggressive marketers will also turn out to be those who most often see double-counting. As it happens, they also tend to be the least likely to let Google put a conversion pixel on their site."

Takeup of the Google CPA format will probably come first not from these big-brand advertisers, he says, but from smaller lead-gen marketers—as long as they can have confidence that the double-counting problem is not too big.

"It's a very similar issue to the deduping involved in list management," says Lee. "There the third-party merge/purge houses became the solution. In the case of the online ad marketplace, the question is whether SEM firms with their own tracking technology like us become the impartial third party?" One answer might be that both Google and the SEM agency track conversions and reconcile the numbers—assuming the divergences werenít too big.

Overall, the success of Google's test will depend on getting enough good offers into the system that AdSense publishers deem it worth the trouble to implement on their pages, and getting enough CPA-friendly pages to induce advertisers to opt into the program. It's the classic chicken /egg dilemma.


This article is originated from http://multichannelmerchant.com/webchannel/seo/Google-action-04042007/

Google AdSense Program Policies

Those who are interested to join google adsense proggram, it is badly needed to know the policies of adsense.

Publishers participating in the AdSense program are required to adhere to the following policies. We ask that you read these policies carefully and refer to this document often. If you fail to comply with these policies, we may disable ad serving to your site and/or disable your AdSense account. While in many cases we prefer to work with publishers to achieve policy compliance, we reserve the right to disable any account at any time. If your account is disabled, you will not be eligible for further participation in the AdSense program.

Please note that we may change our policies at any time, and pursuant to our Terms and Conditions, it is your responsibility to keep up to date with and adhere to the policies posted here.

Invalid Clicks and Impressions

Clicks on Google ads must result from genuine user interest. Any method that artificially generates clicks or impressions on your Google ads is strictly prohibited. These prohibited methods include but are not limited to repeated manual clicks or impressions, using robots, automated click and impression generating tools, third-party services that generate clicks or impressions such as paid-to-click, paid-to-surf, autosurf, and click-exchange programs, or any deceptive software. Please note that clicking on your own ads for any reason is prohibited. Failure to comply with this policy may lead to your account being disabled.

Encouraging clicks

In order to ensure a good experience for users and advertisers, publishers may not request that users click the ads on their sites or rely on deceptive implementation methods to obtain clicks. Publishers participating in the AdSense program:

May not encourage users to click the Google ads by using phrases such as "click the ads," "support us," "visit these links," or other similar language
May not direct user attention to the ads via arrows or other graphical gimmicks
May not place misleading images alongside individual ads
May not promote sites displaying ads through unsolicited mass emails or unwanted advertisements on third-party websites
May not compensate users for viewing ads or performing searches, or promise compensation to a third party for such behavior
May not place misleading labels above Google ad units - for instance, ads may be labeled "Sponsored Links" but not "Favorite Sites"

Site Content
While Google offers broad access to a variety of content in the search index, publishers in the AdSense program may only place Google ads on sites that adhere to our content guidelines, and ads must not be displayed on any page with content primarily in an unsupported language. View a list of supported languages.

Sites displaying Google ads may not include:

Violent content, racial intolerance, or advocacy against any individual, group, or organization
Pornography, adult, or mature content
Hacking/cracking content
Illicit drugs and drug paraphernalia
Excessive profanity
Gambling or casino-related content
Content regarding programs which compensate users for clicking on ads or offers, performing searches, surfing websites, or reading emails
Excessive, repetitive, or irrelevant keywords in the content or code of web pages
Deceptive or manipulative content or construction to improve your site's search engine ranking, e.g., your site's PageRank
Sales or promotion of weapons or ammunition (e.g., firearms, fighting knives, stun guns)
Sales or promotion of beer or hard alcohol
Sales or promotion of tobacco or tobacco-related products
Sales or promotion of prescription drugs
Sales or promotion of products that are replicas or imitations of designer goods
Sales or distribution of term papers or student essays
Any other content that is illegal, promotes illegal activity, or infringes on the legal rights of others

Copyrighted Material

Website publishers may not display Google ads on web pages with content protected by copyright law unless they have the necessary legal rights to display that content. Please see our DMCA policy for more information.

Webmaster Guidelines

AdSense publishers are required to adhere to the webmaster quality guidelines posted at http://www.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html.

Site and Ad Behavior

Sites showing Google ads should be easy for users to navigate and should not contain excessive pop-ups. AdSense code may not be altered, nor may standard ad behavior be manipulated in any way that is not explicitly permitted by Google.

Sites showing Google ads may not contain pop-ups or pop-unders that interfere with site navigation, change user preferences, or initiate downloads.
Any AdSense code must be pasted directly into webpages without modification. AdSense participants are not allowed to alter any portion of the code or change the behavior, targeting, or delivery of ads. For instance, clicks on Google ads may not result in a new browser window being launched.
A site or third party cannot display our ads, search box, search results, or referral buttons as a result of the actions of any software application such as a toolbar.
No AdSense code may be integrated into a software application.
Webpages containing AdSense code may not be loaded by any software that can trigger pop-ups, redirect users to unwanted websites, modify browser settings, or otherwise interfere with site navigation. It is your responsibility to ensure that no ad network or affiliate uses such methods to direct traffic to pages that contain your AdSense code.
Referral offerings must be made without any obligation or requirement to end users. Publishers may not solicit email addresses from users in conjunction with AdSense referral units.

Ad Placement
AdSense offers a number of ad formats and advertising products. Publishers are encouraged to experiment with a variety of placements, provided the following policies are respected:

Up to three ad units may be displayed on each page.
A maximum of two Google AdSense for search boxes may be placed on a page.
A single link unit may also be placed on each page.
Up to two referral units from each referral product or offering may be displayed on a page, in addition to the ad units, search boxes, and link units specified above.
AdSense for search results pages may show only a single ad link unit in addition to the ads Google serves with the search results. No other ads may be displayed on your search results page.
No Google ad or Google search box may be displayed in a pop-up, pop-under, or in an email.
Elements on a page must not obscure any portion of the ads.
No Google ad may be placed on any non-content-based pages.
No Google ad may be placed on pages published specifically for the purpose of showing ads, whether or not the page content is relevant.

Competitive Ads and Services
In order to prevent user confusion, we do not permit Google ads or search boxes to be published on websites that also contain other ads or services formatted to use the same layout and colors as the Google ads or search boxes on that site. Although you may sell ads directly on your site, it is your responsibility to ensure these ads cannot be confused with Google ads.

Last updated: January 2007

You can participate this proggram in the following link:

Google.com/adsense

AddThis Feed Button

ArchSociety news