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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

About Trackback Spider

In the Trackback Spider uing a unique article writing. The idea behind Track Back Spider is creating links to your site by faking links to others blogs. The concept behind a track is that if you comment on your blog with a link to another blog, that blog will do a link back to your site. Because some bloggers actually check their link back links, Track Back Spider provides cloaking to make the blogger think you actually did do a track back. Track Back Spider suggests that by using the cloaking script that you can increase the accepted links by 3-5%.

What Track Back Spider does is tries to find blogs that are applicable to your site. They do this by you providing them keywords. The more keywords you provide them, the more likely they are to find more blogs for you to get track back links from.
After creating a job with up to 1,000 keywords, you allow the track back spider to start looking through the web for applicable blogs that still do track back links.
Track Back Spider suggests you wait 24 hours to allow the software to find all applicable blogs.





Once Track Back Spider is done finding blogs to do track backs to, you are ready to create an account on the poster by using the job that just finished finding blogs posts to track back too. When you create the new account on the poster you can choose to use the cloaking script or not, you can choose the time of day you want to run the posting, and if you want to include no follows in with the posts. And at that point you just let it run.

Now that you know how it works let’s talk about the product itself.

I was asked to do this by someone who thought it was too complicated. Let me be honest, if you watch the videos, figuring out the basics of track back spider is really easy to follow if you’re not doing the cloaking.
The next question I would be asked is cloaking worth doing? Track Back Spider suggests that you get a 3-5% increase in acceptance by using the cloaking script. From 2 months of using this product, this claim is simply false. I got the exact same results using the cloaking script as not using the cloaking script. I will talk more about cloaking later as well.
Track back spider was able to find over 10,000 applicable blogs for 3 of the sites I was testing it on. Unfortunately, Track Back Spider was only able to get 500 or less sites to accept the track backs. Even worse, the entire track backs where not indexed by any of the search engines. Though they “show” the links, they aren’t easy to access. Track Back Spider doesn’t provide a csv or report of any kind to be able to take the links and get them indexed. But at $200 a month, you shouldn’t have to spend more money to get these links indexed.
Track Back Spider goes against the rule we all should keep in mind when building links. Google has said, “Would you do this if we weren’t around”? If Google wasn’t around would you try to fake blog posts for a link? If Google wasn’t around would you try to visually fake out a blogger with a fake link on your site? The answer to both of these is an emphatic NO. Forget the fact that it costs $200 a month, and the track back links aren’t getting indexed, these types of links don’t pass the Google test. I can make an argument for most other types of links, but I can’t here. If you legitimately created a blog post, with a link to someone else’s site this would help to build a relationship with that blogger. With Track Back Spider you aren’t building a relationship, you are being tricking others, and hurting your website’s reputation.

This product isn’t recommended:
- The links don’t get indexed
- Zero affect on rankings
- Costs $200
- This product is about tricking others
- This product isn’t grey hat, it’s as blackhat as they come!

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