The fifth confirmed release of Google’s “Penguin”
spam fighting algorithm is live. That makes it Penguin 5 by our count. But
since this Penguin update is using a slightly improved version of Google’s
“Penguin 2″ second-generation technology, Google itself is calling it “Penguin
2.1.” Don’t worry. We’ll explain the numbering nonsense below, as well as what
this all means for publishers.
New Version of Penguin Live Today
The head of Google’s web spam team, Matt Cutts, shared the news on Twitter, saying the latest release would impact about 1 percent of all searches:
The link that Cutts points at, by the way, explains what Penguin was when it was first launched. It doesn’t cover anything new or changed with the latest release.
Previous Updates
Here are all the confirmed releases of Penguin to date:
- Penguin
1 on April 24, 2012 (impacting around 3.1% of queries)
- Penguin
2 on May 26, 2012 (impacting less than 0.1%)
- Penguin
3 on October 5, 2012 (impacting around 0.3% of queries)
- Penguin
4 (AKA Penguin 2.0) on May 22, 2013 (impacting 2.3% of queries)
- Penguin 5
(AKA Penguin 2.1) on Oct. 4, 2013 (impacting around 1% of queries)
Why Penguin 2.1 AND Penguin 5?
If us talking about Penguin 5 in reference to something Google is calling Penguin 2.1 hurts your head, believe us, it hurts ours, too. But you can pin that blame back on Google. Here’s why.
If us talking about Penguin 5 in reference to something Google is calling Penguin 2.1 hurts your head, believe us, it hurts ours, too. But you can pin that blame back on Google. Here’s why.
When Google started releasing its “Panda”
algorithm designed to fight low-quality content, it called the first one simply
“Panda.” So when the second came out, people referred to that as “Panda 2.”
When the third came out, people called that Panda 3 — causing Google
to say that the third release, because it was relatively minor, really only
should be called Panda 2.1 — the “point” being used to indicate how much a
minor change it was.
Google eventually — and belatedly
— indicated that a Panda 3 release happened, causing the numbering to move into
Panda 3.0, Panda 3.1 and so on until there had been so many “minor” updates
that we having to resort to going further out in decimal places to things like Panda
3.92.
That caused us here at Search Engine Land to decide it
would be easier all around if we just numbered any confirmed update
sequentially, in order of when they came. No matter how “big” or “small” an
update might be, we’d just give it the next number on the list: Penguin 1,
Penguin 2, Penguin 3 and so on.
Thanks for the Headache, Google
That worked out fine until Penguin 4, because Google
typically didn’t give these updates numbers itself. It just said there was an
update, and left it to us or others to attach a number to it.
But when Penguin 4 arrived, Google really wanted to stress
that it was using what it deemed to be a major, next-generation change in how Penguin
works. So, Google called it Penguin 2, despite all the references to a Penguin
2 already being out there, despite the fact it hadn’t really numbered many of
these various updates before.
Today’s update, as can be seen above, has been dubbed
Penguin 2.1 — so supposedly, it’s a relatively minor change to the previous
Penguin filter that was being used. However, if it’s impacting around 1 percent
of queries as Google says, that means it is more significant than what Google
might have considered to be similar “minor” updates of Penguin 1.1 and Penguin
1.2.
What Is Penguin Again? And How Do I Deal With It?
For those new to the whole “Penguin” concept, Penguin is a
part of Google’s overall search algorithm that periodically looks for sites
that are deemed to be spamming Google’s search results but somehow still
ranking well. In particular, it goes after sites that may have purchased paid
links.
If you were hit by Penguin, you’ll likely know if you see a
marked drop in traffic that begins today or tomorrow. To recover, you’ll need
to do things like disavow bad links or manually have those removed. Filing a
reconsideration request doesn’t help, because Penguin is an automated process.
Until it sees that what it considers to be bad has been removed, you don’t recover.
If you were previously hit by Penguin and have taken actions
hopefully meant to fix that, today and tomorrow are the days to watch. If you
see an improvement in traffic, that’s a sign that you’ve escaped Penguin.Source: http://searchengineland.com/penguin-2-1-and-5-live-173632
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