Lowell Christensen

Free Autority Codes for Getting Back Links from .gov and .edu Websites!

One quality back link, such as from a .gov or .edu, is equal to 25 lower quality back links.

Here are Free Authority Codes to get your quality back links to your website from .gov and .edu websites (as well as high quality .com's as well).

Click Here for The Free Codes!

Tags: back, links, quality

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Here we go again. Another "secret" to getting highly ranked on the search engines. I received an email from someone offering a "free" report about these codes which supposedly can move your site up 100 positions overnight.
No one, using legitimate marketing methods, can get results like that that fast! Real marketing takes time, effort, and patience to get results. Even though you may get a temporary boost from these "free" codes, as soon as Google finds out what you're doing, you're more likely to get banned - and they have banned much bigger companies than yours, banning you will be no problem.
This is merely an attempt to take advantage of people who do not have the budget for real marketing in order to make money from them.
This is simply something to help you find .edu and .gov blogs where you can post a comment with a url link back to your website. A totally legitimate seo strategy. No magic... just a search tool to find those .edu and .gov blogs easier. .edu and .gov are highly valued by Google. Again, no secret... no magic... I didn't think there was any hype in my post...

And regarding your comment about being banned by Google for posting a comment on a blog? What are you talking about? And as far as taking advantage of people... they are FREE Joseph. It's a simple pdf helping you find these blogs to post a comment on.

Joseph Shivell said:
Here we go again. Another "secret" to getting highly ranked on the search engines. I received an email from someone offering a "free" report about these codes which supposedly can move your site up 100 positions overnight.
No one, using legitimate marketing methods, can get results like that that fast! Real marketing takes time, effort, and patience to get results. Even though you may get a temporary boost from these "free" codes, as soon as Google finds out what you're doing, you're more likely to get banned - and they have banned much bigger companies than yours, banning you will be no problem.
This is merely an attempt to take advantage of people who do not have the budget for real marketing in order to make money from them.
Matt Cuts himself has said that .edu and .gov domains are not valued higher than other domains, all else being equal. The type of domain has nothing to do with how highly a link is valued.
You misunderstood my comment about being banned by Google, although you are correct that making a comment in a blog will not get someone banned. What I meant was, using any technique to artificially substantially increase your links, such as buying large quantities of links, or suddenly getting a lot of links from high quality websites and no other links, can result in getting a site banned if Google thinks you are using black hat techniques.
As far as the report being free, both you and I know that this is a way to build your mailing list, so that you can send email later for any offer you have that does cost money
Agreed.. "all things being equal". So I will clarify. Taking into account the law of averages, .edu and .gov are considered higher quality - not by nature of they domain extension - but by nature of their content. The average schmuck can't get one of these extensions, so the odds are these domains will be better sites overall. A higher percentage of these sites are of high volue, so it pays to try and get links back from them.

But I agree whole heartily ... never buy mass links. Don't purchase black hat link exchange programs. Do the manual labor to get them, but focus on the valuable links, rather than quantity of lower quality links.

The pdf report I offered is not buying links, nor using black hat technique... it is simply a method to search Google for blogs with .edu and .gov links so the results come up on page one of Google, rather than having to dig deeper into Google, which of course can be done. Thanks for your comments... I do learn something new every day online.

Joseph Shivell said:
Matt Cuts himself has said that .edu and .gov domains are not valued higher than other domains, all else being equal. The type of domain has nothing to do with how highly a link is valued.
You misunderstood my comment about being banned by Google, although you are correct that making a comment in a blog will not get someone banned. What I meant was, using any technique to artificially substantially increase your links, such as buying large quantities of links, or suddenly getting a lot of links from high quality websites and no other links, can result in getting a site banned if Google thinks you are using black hat techniques.
As far as the report being free, both you and I know that this is a way to build your mailing list, so that you can send email later for any offer you have that does cost money

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