Parasite hosting
Parasite hosting, in computing, is the process of hosting a website on someone else's server without their consent, generally for the purpose of search engine benefit.[1]
Mechanism
Search engines such as Google rank search results based on the relevance to the search query and other websites linking to it. Google PageRank has not been updated since 5 December 2013,[2] however, Page Rank is still being used in the Google Algorithm as John Mueller has confirmed this on 02/06/2015 in a Webmaster Hangout. What still affects the ranking is Page and Domain Authority. Evil minded people take advantage of this, by gaining illegally access to their victims webhost and adding a sub-domain or a sub-page. Those sub-pages are providing content which is mostly complete different compared to the root domain. The sub-page contains outbound links and benefits of the roots domains/page authority, leading to a high ranking on search engines. This method became very popular in 2007, but is still being abused today. In contrast to Website defacement parasite hosting´s main goal is profit, either through sales or other kind of advertising.
See also
- Link building: linking directly to a page within another website.
References
- ↑ http://cognitiveseo.com/blog/5442/4-techniques-to-identify-if-your-site-is-abused-by-parasite-hosting-seo-doorways/
- ↑ John Mueller, Google Webmaster