Rick Ace said:Generally, Blackhat SEO refers to obtaining higher search ranks through ways that are not supported by the search engine. Since many search engines have their own policies and terms of use that prohibit such manipulation, it is illegal in the form that you are using a service without obeying its policies and requirements.
P8I.com said:Most blackhat SEO involves using techniques on your own website, or on another website within your niche, not Google Search itself. Doing something that violates their policy would simply result in you being banned/sandboxed from their service. Unless you're manipulating Google (etc.) sites themselves, then Google has no grounds to involve the law.
If you intend on using a service, it is your legal obligation to follow its policies.VirusZero said:Violating one site's policies (unless in an gross fashion like hacking their server to gain credit card numbers) isn't illegal.
VirusZero said:Just because (some) blackhat techniques aren't expressly illegal doesn't mean companies won't/can't discourage their use and put practices into place for that purpose. Some of these techniques do cause problems, harm or issues for the company or it's users.
Rick Ace said:But if you are explicitly making changes on your site to manipulate results on Google, you border violating policies, and are probably subject to being banned by the search engine.
That is not why its called black hat. And they are not illegal . *shrug*wasi90lk said:Black hat SEO techniques are 100% illegal, that is why they are called "black hat".
Beverly said:There are no legal penalties such as jail time for doing Blackhat SEO unless it involves hacking, spam or theft of private property. But just because it's not illegal does that make it ethical or moral to do?
Jordan said:That don't make it illegal. Unless you are specifically hacking into websites, (Which btw is not black hat seo at all as some of you may think.. that is hacking. it is illegal) you should be fine. You can't get fines, you cant get jail time, and you cant get charged.
Mind you, it also depends on other things. If you are scamming, manipulating, ruining/tarnishing/slandering ones reputation in order to self benefit you may end up in some trouble.
Rick Ace said:I used the word "border" with that in mind. If you knowingly manipulate your page rank or break the service's policies while retaining interest in using the service, then yes, it is in fact illegal. For example, if I placed a script on my site to manipulate results specifically on Google, it can arguably be deemed that you are intending on using Google's service, and are breaking their guidelines. This could very well be illegal. But most likely, you will just get banned from Google's services or a portion of them.
P8I.com said:Rick Ace said:I used the word "border" with that in mind. If you knowingly manipulate your page rank or break the service's policies while retaining interest in using the service, then yes, it is in fact illegal. For example, if I placed a script on my site to manipulate results specifically on Google, it can arguably be deemed that you are intending on using Google's service, and are breaking their guidelines. This could very well be illegal. But most likely, you will just get banned from Google's services or a portion of them.
It'd only be illegal if somebody did what you mentioned earlier, and that is penetrate Google's systems somehow and directly manipulate their service. But as far as what you're doing on your own site (or others), Google really has no say or control over that other to ban you from their results. That would be dangerous and pretty absurd if webmasters were indeed subject to real world punishment over violating Google's policies.
Rick Ace said:P8I.com said:Rick Ace said:I used the word "border" with that in mind. If you knowingly manipulate your page rank or break the service's policies while retaining interest in using the service, then yes, it is in fact illegal. For example, if I placed a script on my site to manipulate results specifically on Google, it can arguably be deemed that you are intending on using Google's service, and are breaking their guidelines. This could very well be illegal. But most likely, you will just get banned from Google's services or a portion of them.
It'd only be illegal if somebody did what you mentioned earlier, and that is penetrate Google's systems somehow and directly manipulate their service. But as far as what you're doing on your own site (or others), Google really has no say or control over that other to ban you from their results. That would be dangerous and pretty absurd if webmasters were indeed subject to real world punishment over violating Google's policies.
You're still missing the point. If you made changes on your site to manipulate Google's results, with the intention of using Google's services, then you are a google user that has violated its policies. It's a grey area. But it's not exactly clean either. A few e-mails or posts for proof of your intentions could land you in a legal dead zone.
P8I.com said:That's still not accurate. "using Google's services" All that entails is Google crawling your website, which is part of their own effort. Doing things to your site that exploits Google's algorithm (e.g. article spinning) doesn't make one a Google user. By that logic, every one is a Google user (at any moment they decide to crawl your page) unless you have code in the Robots.txt preventing them from indexing you. Lastly, nothing that black hats do (that I'm aware of) is necessarily inherant to Google. So you really can't even argue that a black hat is accepting Google policy by virtue of altering his site.
Jordan said:Mind you, it also depends on other things. If you are scamming, manipulating, ruining/tarnishing/slandering ones reputation in order to self benefit you may end up in some trouble.
Rick Ace said:What you're talking about is circumstantial and might be something for a lawyer to explore. But the bottom line is that if Google can prove that you have intentions of using their services, while manipulating their search results for your site, you're in deep legal mess. We're talking about avoiding the grey area here, and not about the chances of winning or loses lawsuits.
P8I.com said:And your logic
Rick Ace said:P8I.com said:And your logic
It's not about logic, and that's what you are missing. And by intentions, I mean that you've taken serious and clearly defined steps towards using the service you are manipulating.
There is no precedent because the costs and resources towards pursuing such a minimal case would be pointless. However, you can't claim an action is legal because any cases against it haven't been brought against it in the past. The lack of a precedent means nothing.
Let's be specific here. If you used a script on your website that specifically target's TheSearchEngine.Com, then you are approaching a legal grey area. If you sold that script to another individual, the other party can indeed sue you for the amount you requested in return of your services, based on the legal terms of your service. Thus, you cannot "pretend not to use the service" (which is what you are depending on).
P8I.com said:I explained that it wasn't illegal because you're not agreeing to Google policy by virtue of making changes to your site.
Rick Ace said:This argument is futile because we currently have no standard set for "blackhat seo". It's almost anything you want to call it at this point.
Rick Ace said:Blackhat SEO really started out as a type of penetration technique. Most of it involved gaining access to networks without permission. The term was broadened to include the practice of finding loopholes in search engines to manipulate results. The latest view of "Backhat SEO" isn't close to what it used to be in previous years.
Generally, Blackhat SEO refers to obtaining higher search ranks through ways that are not supported by the search engine. Since many search engines have their own policies and terms of use that prohibit such manipulation, it is illegal in the form that you are using a service without obeying its policies and requirements.
Rick Ace said:And I never stated that making changes to your site was the only factor involved.
If you use a script on your server to manipulate the SPECIFIC results of TheSearchEngine.Com, then you are clearly directing your intention at changing the results displayed at TheSearchEngine.Com.
Rick Ace said:I can understand why you're confused. Usually with "blackhat seo techniques" today, you're usually directing your attention at IP addresses. But if your script clearly goes with the company's name, and the purpose of that script is to manipulate results of that company, then yes, you are in legal trouble. The border is thin, and that's why I prefer to call it the legal grey area, as the only way to find out is for the argument to be made publicly.
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