by Ana Hoffman 48 comments

Weekly Marketing Skinny: April 27, 2013

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get the skinny on marketing events of past weekIn the spotlight this week:

  • W3 Total Cache and WP Super Cache vulnerability;
  • User-generated content (blog comments) causes Google manual penalty;
  • Twitter woes;
  • Scam alerts;
  • Government sensors Google;
  • Tax-free online shopping no more;
  • and more.

Let’s start with Traffic Generation Café recap.

At TrafficGenerationCafe.com

SEO was in spotlight last week at Traffic Generation Café.

orange checkFirst up is an incredible post from Alex Whalley:

Alex explains step-by-step how to find out why your competitors are ranking above you and what you can do to change that by reverse engineering their backlinks - all using free tools.

orange checkOn page SEO plugins: what are they? What do they do? Do you need one?

I also had too much time on my hands (as if…), so I put together an on page SEO cheat sheet to give you no excuses not to do it:

WordPress

Plugin Vulnerability Alert

orange checkSucuri announced vulnerabilities in the extremely popular W3 Total Cache and WP Super Cache plugins, in which a hacker can execute code on your site without requiring direct access to the backend.

If you use either plugin you should…

  1. check that you site hasn’t been compromised and
  2. upgrade your plugins immediately.

The check is really simple — just enter the following into the comments form on one of your blog posts:

<!–mfunc echo PHP_VERSION; –><!–/mfunc–>

If, after the comment was submitted, you see a version number (e.g. 5.2.17) in place of the above code, your site has been compromised.

Either way, UPGRADE your plugins now!

(hat tip - Tom Ewer at MaganeWP.com)

Google+ Comments

orange checkIn the last marketing skinny, I mentioned that Blogger blogs could now incorporate Google+ comments.

Sure enough, turned out WP blogs can now do that as well.

Here’s an excellent post from Kim Castleberry with all directions on how to do it you’d need:

Will I add Google+ comments at Traffic Generation Café? I am considering it. You?

SEO News

Mozilla Penalty

orange checkMozilla.org, the non-profit organization behind Firefox, Thunderbird, and many other developer oriented tools, was penalized by Google.

The penalty was a “manual penalty” due to extremely spammy user generated content. (see forum thread here)

As in spam blog comments and addons sections, among others.

A few days ago, I received an email from a reader:

I started my Technology blog a few months ago (blog.pablooliverabrizzio.com). Recently I started to see a boom in visits. The comments are great or at least very positive about the design and content.

The problem is that I have noticed most of the people posting, if you click on their names or website promote creams, or mattresses or similar stuff. It’s evident that they haven’t read the articles and that the only goal is to get exposure.

I’m having a hard time on filtering who to send to spam and who to leave there.

My response was:

I know it takes guts to delete those kinds of comment, Pablo, when you are just starting - after all, a comment is a comment, right?

However, my advice is to not publish them.

If legitimate readers see you publishing junk comments, it might turn them away and harm your site in the long run.

And now I can add Google penalty to the reasons of why you shouldn’t publish spam comments - ever, as tempting as it could be for a brand new blog.

You can’t let others come to your house, make a mess of it, and not have to clean it up at some point.

I had to do that kind of clean-up a while ago and it wasn’t fun:

Now, as it turned out, the penalty affected only one page out of some 22Mil pages on Mozilla website.

Matt Cutts wrote:

In this particular case, it was the url http://blog.mozilla.org/respindola/about/ that we took action on, and that was because it was so defaced with spam comments. I checked the URL this morning and it was over 12 megabytes (!) of spam from 21,169 different comments. When a page like that lands in our search results, it’s the sort of thing that users complain to us about, so we are willing to take action.

Nonetheless, the mere possibility of getting penalized for publishing unscrupulous comments should definitely give us, bloggers, even more incentive to do what we should be doing all along: growing a health community of engaged readers and not publishing comments for the sake of social proof.

Social Media News

Twitter

orange checkTwitter definitely needs two-factor authentication; the kind of authentication Google has implemented back in 2011.

The fake tweet from the hacked Associated Press Twitter account just might give them the kick in the rear they need.

And surprisingly, the hacker’s account is still alive and kicking (at least as of the writing of this post).

They’ve suspended my Twitter accounts for doing a LOT less in the past (like… actually tweeting posts from other bloggers), and they can’t do anything about this one?

Boo!

More on the story.

orange checkNext week, Comedy Central will host a five-day comedy festival with icons like Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner alongside popular young comics like Amy Schumer.

The festival will take place almost entirely on Twitter , with comedians posting video snippets of routines and round tables and posting jokes using the hashtag #ComedyFest.

More on the story at NYTimes.com.

Facebook

orange checkFacebook Home had crossed the 500,000 download threshold on Google Play. Pretty stellar numbers, I’d say.

What’s no so stellar are Facebook Home reviews.

orange checkAltoona, Iowa, will soon become the home for Facebook’s newest data center.

They plan to break ground this summer and expect to begin serving user traffic in 2014.

Pinterest

orange checkPinterest listened to the users’ feedback and actually did something about it: reverted back to some original features that were missed.

The features include:

  • See it now;
  • Repinned from;
  • @Mentions;
  • Find friends.

Scam Alert

Rippln Investigation

orange checkI am sure you’ve gotten an email or two or ten about RippIn by now.

It goes something like this:

I’ve been working behind the scenes on a new viral app that’s about to launch, and I thought that you might be interested.

I just signed an NDA to get more info, and was given the ability to invite just 5 people, and I thought that you’d be a perfect fit.

Yep, it is exactly what it sounds like - something to avoid like a plague.

Kim Castleberry just published a post with more information about RippIn with videos from Chris Voss.

You can also read some hilarious (and very true) bullet points on this “opportunity of a lifetime” on TechCrunch.

And who calls a startup “RippIn” anyway? It’s a ripoff and they are not even hiding it?

And, more importantly, how would anyone fall for it?

Reminds me of another “startup” so many folks did dish out a pretty penny to be a part of.

Empower Network

orange checkIf you haven’t read my Empower Network review, read it.

If you want a second opinion, read the awesome rant my friend Alex Whalley just published:

(excuse his language, he doesn’t know any better, lol)

Government

Governments Censor Google (and us)

orange checkEven though I try to stay out of this kind of news, I found this very interesting.

Google just published their new Transparency Report that shine some light on the scale and scope of government requests for censorship and data around the globe.

From July to December 2012, Google received 2,285 government requests to remove 24,179 pieces of content—an increase from the 1,811 requests to remove 18,070 pieces of content that they received during the first half of 2012.

As we’ve gathered and released more data over time, it’s become increasingly clear that the scope of government attempts to censor content on Google services has grown.

In more places than ever, we’ve been asked by governments to remove political content that people post on our services.

In this particular time period, we received court orders in several countries to remove blog posts criticizing government officials or their associates.

CISPA Passes House Over Objections

orange checkSupporters of the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act say it is needed to protect U.S. citizens and companies from computer attacks.

However, opponents including small business owners, worry it lacks any protections on the government’s use of our private data.

Update 4/28: Senate says no… for now

Tax-Free No More

Soon enough we’ll be paying taxes for all online shopping.

The bill, called the Marketplace Fairness Act, would allow states to require online sellers around the country to collect sales tax for them on purchases made by their residents.

A final Senate vote is scheduled for May 6. (full story in Wall Street Journal)

Marketing this and that

Eric Schmidt’s New Book

orange checkGoogle Executive Chairman, Eric Schmidt with co-author and foreign policy expert Jared Cohen, have just released their new book The New Digital Age.

Yahoo!

orange checkYahoo! is retiring several products.

  • Upcoming,
  • Yahoo! Kids,
  • Yahoo! Deals.
  • Yahoo! SMS Alerts
  • Yahoo! Mail and Messenger feature phone (J2ME) apps

Older versions of Yahoo Mail will be disabled as well on June 3.

Those of you using the older versions of Yahoo! Mail can switch to the new Yahoo! Mail.

Inforgraphics

orange checkLove infographics?

Have aspirations to make your own, but have no idea how to approach it?

Here’s a simple guide from HubSpot on how to use PowerPoint to make infographics (hat tip for the link to Tasia Gonsalves-Barriero):

Inbound Marketing Video

orange checkHere’s a great way to give your next video a creative spin (from HubSpot):

Can’t sing? Even better.

More people are likely to watch an epic fail. It’s true.

Thank You

To all of you who mentioned Traffic Generation Café in any share or form in the past week, my whole-hearted THANK YOU.

Traffic Generation Café would NOT be what it is today without you.

Here are just some of the mentions I came across in the past week:

orange checkExpert Chat: Ti Roberts Shows Us How to Get More Blog Traffic - Ti Roberts in her interview with Joseph Adediji at bloggingtipstoday.com

orange check10 Lessons from the Guest Blogging School of Hard Knocks - Ileane Smith gave TGC a shout at BasicBlogTips.com

orange checkThe Benefits of Blogging for Business - Jen Barry at inboundmarketingagents.com

orange checkMYF Approved weekly: April 20 - Lain Robson at marketingyourfarm.com

orange checkBuilding Reader Engagement Is Difficult, Or Is It? [25+ Tactics, Tools and Examples] - Adam Connell at bloggingwizard.com

Have I missed your mention? Let me know in the comments!

Want to see your name here? Mention Traffic Generation Café in your next blog post!

To an even better next week,

traffic generation cafe

traffic generation cafe comment below

Google+ Comments

{ 48 comments… read them below or add one }

Astro Gremlin@ May 1, 2013 at 8:06 pm

Great round-up post, Ana. It may just be my browser, but your photos are showing up as broken (on another of your pages, too). Gee whiz it’s a dangerous world out there.

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Ana Hoffman May 2, 2013 at 8:24 pm

My site was down, and not everything has come back, Astro - I need to reupload some pics.

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James May 1, 2013 at 4:11 am

Great post!

I use both the W3 Total Cache and WP Super Cache plugins. I’ve upgraded them both and added the fix.

Thanks!

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Ana Hoffman May 1, 2013 at 9:29 am

Glad to help, James.

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Radu April 29, 2013 at 11:43 am

I don’t like disquiss myself but it’s webmaster’s choice. Anyway, really a comprehensive and well thought post!

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Ana Hoffman May 1, 2013 at 9:14 am

It certainly is a blogger’s choice, but why choose something that will bring engagement down, right?

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Nicole Fende April 29, 2013 at 6:41 am

Ana thanks for the all the great stuff. The W3 Cache had me scrambling to my website and upgrading.

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Ana Hoffman April 29, 2013 at 7:09 am

Glad to help, Nicole.

By the way, gave you a shout in this post https://trafficgenerationcafe.online/weekly-marketing-skinny-april-2-2013/; did you see it?

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chigo April 29, 2013 at 5:40 am

Thanks for this post Ana. I also hate Disqus I have never commented on any website or blog that uses it. Too tedious

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Ana Hoffman April 29, 2013 at 7:07 am

You are welcome, Chigo.

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Michael April 29, 2013 at 2:21 am

Hello Ana,
Thanks for the information about the ‘security alert’; you are the only person to highlight this problem that I’ve seen, who hasn’t tried to profit by the dilemma facing WordPress users. (So sad)
Why is it people feel obliged to try and profit by other people’s misery?
Have you written a post on security?
Regards,
Michael

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Ana Hoffman April 29, 2013 at 7:06 am

No, I haven’t written anything on WP security, Michael; it’s not exactly my area of expertise.

And thanks for coming by.

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Matt April 28, 2013 at 7:17 pm

Hi Ana,

Wow this is a hugely informative post. I’m almost tempted to PRINT it out for my partners to read up on to, but I think that dates me a bit..! Anyway this has some really crucial info for us-on another couple blogs we WERE using some of the plugins in question and we’ve updated them just now.

Thanks for your help-this is a model blog-no joking here.

Matt

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 9:09 pm

Thanks so much, Matt - I publish these updates weekly. And I like to print things out as well. :)

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Bill Nickerson April 28, 2013 at 2:19 pm

I was invited to Rippln by a family friend who is big on MLM stuff. It looked pretty hoaky to me, but there was no cost to get in on the pre-release step so I figured I’d give it a try.

Once inside it outlines the 4 stages they plan on. A lot of hype. Typical MLM conference calls, chats, etc. The typical “never seen before” payout scheme.

I’m not so sure I want to go any further than this, but the phase 4 interests me (unfortunately, can’t tell you what that is 8=( But I expect this is one of those things that will sucker a lot of people and then fold up. But it might be worth getting in for free at this point to keep an eye on it.

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 9:07 pm

Thanks for the heads up, Bill.

Personally, I am not planning on making it to the other side unless their emails annoy the heck out of me and make me write a review on them. LOL

Keep me updated!

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Jose Rustafer April 28, 2013 at 12:27 pm

Nice post. I really wish that Twitter would institute authentication.

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iain April 28, 2013 at 3:31 am

Hello Ana,

You got my shout out last week. Thank you for the one this week.

I’m surprised it has taken twitter so long to implement a two factor authentication. It adds a much needed level of security.

In terms of Facebook, I haven’t bothered to try Facebook Home at all. I don’t use Facebook primarily and the thought of having that much integration on my phone would annoy me.

Great round up Ana.

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 9:02 pm

Always appreciate your support, Lain.

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Ilia April 28, 2013 at 2:00 am

I will put this good Google Comments services into my website,thank Ana.

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 3:14 pm

You are welcome, Ilia; let me know how it goes.

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Christina Sponias April 27, 2013 at 7:43 pm

Some people suggest the modification of comments at your Wordpress blog when you don’t like them. What do you think about that? Should we use the option to edit comments?

I usually delete links from comments using this option.

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 3:13 pm

I wouldn’t start editing your readers’ comments, Christina. You can certainly disagree with them and post your response accordingly or simply don’t publish the comment at all - I’ve done that in the past with a few comments that were inflammatory rants and didn’t add any value.

And yes, I’ve published comments in the past after taking out their link. I don’t mind people expressing opinions at Traffic Generation Café, but it doesn’t mean that I have to reward them with a link as well.

Any other comment editing I’d stay away from.

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LQ April 27, 2013 at 3:49 pm

I’ve respected your thoughtful opinion about the other questionable business called Empower…But to use Mr. Voss review where he calls MLM a pyramid scheme is completely without grounds…I started watching his review but could not stomach an grossly uneducated opinion on this industry. Mr. Voss needs to do a much better job at learning what an illegal pyramid scheme and not lump MLM’s into it. If MLM’s are pyramid schemes then we can say the same about governments, institutions and big corporate companies — they’re ALL set up that way!
Mr. Voss says “by signing an NDA, they signing their life away”…I’d beg to differ, there’s a lot of stiff competition in the App world and I believe is trying to keep things under wraps-he and all other naysayers can can wait till early June launch of the app when it goes public-IF they even want to use it for free (there will never be any obligation to pay the upgrade fee).

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 3:08 pm

I respect your opinion, LQ - spoken like someone who’s had to defend MLM before. :)

I’ve started my personal online career in MLM, so I know a thing or two about it.

I think when people in MLM focus more on recruiting their downline vs the product, it starts looking more and more like a pyramid business. If no one is selling the product (or the product isn’t that good to begin with), then it simply comes down to how many people you can put under you.

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LQ May 6, 2013 at 7:58 pm

I’ll admit that maybe Rippln’s preemptive push is more than little too early-if I were the CEO I’d waited until the company was much closer to launch. Their launch has been pushed back to sometime in June. It doesn’t seem like you or Mr. Voss is clear on the correct definition of a “pyramid scheme”.

For starters Rippln has not asked for a single red penny to join the business. The only POSSIBLE scam at this point is IF they were to misuse the contact details from the members’ back-offices. Based on what I’ve learned I’d be stunned if they played such games with people’s info. I’d venture to say they have a written Privacy Policy in place to assure registrants that their info is safe.

If you’ll allow me to shed some light on the issue, here’s an excerpt from a Q&A section on MLM I put together:

‘Pyramid schemes are most often illegal and non-sustainable business models which offers products or services of little to no value. Pyramid schemes can take on a number of different forms, but for our discussion let’s look at a product-based scheme. This form comes disguised as a legitimate direct sales opportunity. Pyramid schemes are characterized by unproportioned value flowing up, while providing little to no value flowing down. In a nutshell, commissions are paid on recruits buying pricey starter kits. The product lacks value so the originators devise a scheme to hook people with quick commissions paid from pricey sales kits sold. Some companies will walk the grey line of asking for hundreds and even thousands of dollars (over $20K in some cases) so recruits can form part their of distributor/associate founder circle. This “privileged” status ends up being worthless when the company goes out of business. I don’t mean to say becoming a founder is always a bad idea. As a general rule, I tend to shy away from a company if I’m asked to pay more than $100 to become a founder. If they offer different founder levels which go above the $100 mark-I tend to run the other way.’

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Ana Hoffman May 6, 2013 at 8:42 pm

Well, they certainly do know how to teach their members to send out unsolicited spam. Just because there’s no payout just yet, doesn’t really mean it doesn’t fit the bill. Money trail will follow shortly, I am sure.

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LQ May 6, 2013 at 9:07 pm

REALLY? I’d be the first one to flag such behavior. Maybe some groups took it upon themselves to spam — but you’d have to point out where corporate is condoning such behavior. As you know, SOME people in this industry follow paths which aren’t sanctioned by management. But we can certainly say the same for virtually all other industries, there’s no telling what people will do. I can only do my best to always do the right thing by others.

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Ana Hoffman May 6, 2013 at 9:23 pm

I’ve gotten about a dozen or more emails from their members, all coming from a noreply rippin account (obviously set up by the company) designed to bring you to the site and sign up under that specific member.

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LQ May 8, 2013 at 12:17 pm

It’s obvious these invites were unsolicited…I apologize on behalf of the Rippln management. I’m not a part of the corporate team but feel I need to at least express my regrets when members feel they have a free license to just spam anyone and everyone. I’ve flagged this activity in at least 2 facebook Rippln groups so far-this really gives the professional marketers like myself a bad name. Hopefully mgmt will do something about cracking down on those who spam. If not, I have no qualms with moving on to better opportunities.

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Kimberly Castleberry April 27, 2013 at 1:28 pm

Thanks for your kind shoutouts and mentions as always gf! Any chance you would mind updating the CISPA stuff to include the fact that our many actions this week were effective in stopping it in the Senate? CISPA did not pass Senate. They say they are writing up a revised policy to more correctly take into account user privacy concerns. Thank you to everyone who took part in the awareness campaigns and #CISPABlackout
Kim

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 3:04 pm

Thanks for the heads-up on CISPA, Kim; updated the post.

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Mark April 27, 2013 at 12:58 pm

Hey Ana,
Normally I am a passive blog reader, and even on some of the most controversial/interesting post I don’t comment. Maybe I don’t have huge convictions on any subject or maybe I don’t need others to hear me yap about stuff does little change, but here I am commenting!
I have been reading most of your posts for about the last year and among all of the people of importance (add real and relevant value) I follow you are rising to the top of my list.
I would first like to thank your for openness and guts to poke at whom ever does dumb stuff…..even at ourselves. Kudos!
I really enjoy these weekly “Skinny’s” as they are most helpful to busy entrepreneurs like me. I get more value out of a 1/2 hour of reading your personal views and curated content than hours of slogging through others so called quality content to find those small nuggets of good stuff.
So what sparked me to comment here? Well to give your readers some good ole evidence of cause and effect of the value found here.
Even though most of this post was of interest to me one article was of personal/business interest in that I would not have heard about the tax changes possibly coming to online shoppers and business owners in the US. Since I am person of other than US residence and from a place most Americans have only a vague idea of it’s existence (Canada) and my country has a market about only 1/10th the size of the US. I find I have to keep informed of your policies. How does this effect me directly you wonder? Well I have just started a business ( I am financing the startup) with a US citizen in order to gain access to this huge market.
I don’t have time to read news feeds of all that happens in both my country and yours….as well as the rest of the world (yes there is one out side the US). So when I saw the tidbit about changing tax laws that could potentially affect how we set up this new business, of course I stop to read it. The cause (tax changes) the effect (more research, advanced warning of possible changes and what are the repercussions).
Now to humanize this! This startup is a small eCommerce business hoping to grow to provide a reasonable income for this US citizen and if all goes well expand it into Canada. The US citizen is my sister. The down turn in the economy has crushed her hopes for the “American Dream” . Her husband is an Entertainer (and a good one) and she is a home schooling mom. Where they live entertainment gigs have tanked. I have stepped in to help get her back on her feet and be in more control of their financial future by utilizing the internet and all it’s vast opportunities and when things change in that arena I need to know.
To get any business up and running it is essential to keep informed of all the changes going on as well such as SEO, Google algorithms, Twitter/Facebook updates, even tax laws etc…. it’s all here at Ana’s place.

Sorry for the long diatribe people… it just flowed out of me! I guess maybe I should post more often they would probably be shorter! Ha ha!
I hope this comment is of value to at least one person!

Regards

Mark Burns
V.P Web Store Central

P.S. - Ana is the check in the mail? ;-0 Just kidding folks!

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 2:59 pm

Definitely enjoyed reading your comment, Mark; you should do that more often - comment that is, as well as boost my ego. :)

I hear you about started a new business; a lot to keep up with. The laws are ever-changing and hard to keep up with at times.

All the best to you and your sister (when are you planning to “open the doors”?)!

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Mark May 4, 2013 at 9:29 am

The “Grand Opening” is scheduled for June 1 2013. It will be a small opening. We will be focusing on micro-niche products, not an overloaded “all products” store. We will be market testing products before then to select the best moving/profit margin products.
Thanks you for your best wishes!

Mark

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Howard Lee Harkness April 27, 2013 at 12:54 pm

I had panicked a bit when the Securi warning came out, because I was using WP Super Cache on several of my blogs, and I was wondering how to test for a compromise.

Thank you for providing a simple check.

I have applied that check to several of my sites, and I was pleased to see that I managed to remove the caching plugin before the security hole was accessed by a hacker.

You have probably also heard that there is an on-going brute-force admin penetration attack being run by an enormous bot-net. In my more cynical moments, I find myself thinking that the attack is just a smoke-screen to cover up the real attack — whatever that is. Somebody commented that such a thought was being paranoid, to which I replied that if they are *really* out to get you, it isn’t paranoia.

The best known way to protect yourself against this attack is to use a very long, very secure password combined with two-factor authentication on your admin accounts. Much as I like to dis Google, their authenticator plugin in tandem with their Android app work pretty well.

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 2:54 pm

I rushed to double-check mine as well, Howard.

Yes, we talked about brute-force attacks in the previous Weekly Skinny. Per Matt Mullenweg, the best thing we can do to protect ourselves is to get rid of default “admin” longins, have strong passwords, and update WP.

Whether there’s something more behind those attacks or not, in most cases, if someone wants to hack our sites, they’ll most likely find a way and there’s much we can do about it. That’s the sad truth.

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Alexander Kingsbury April 27, 2013 at 11:23 am

I might check out Google+ comments, but I’ll probably stick with Disqus. So far, the largest problem I have with it that school servers ban it as “Web Communications”, but that’s a minor issue.

What’s interesting is that I’ve seen a couple communities complain about the vote-down feature. I can see it as being optional, but some of the more negative communities need a vote-down. There’s an astronomical difference between comment sections like this and the comment sections seen at news and celeb sites.

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Rohan Shankar April 27, 2013 at 9:57 pm

Disqus is also the best when it comes to spam comments. Everytime someone posts irrelevant links, it gets blocked. I don’t have to worry about anything when using Disqus!

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 3:14 pm

How does Disqus know whether my link is relevant or not, Rohan?

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 2:50 pm

From my personal experience, Disqus discourages engagement, Alexander. It’s only convenient for the blogger, but many readers don’t want to have to keep track of so many longins and commenting system.

Also, there’s no good notification of comment responses with Disqus. For instance, you’ll get my response to this comment in the email and, if you wish to add anything, you can easily do so, or at least you’ll know that I cared to respond. With Disqus, I never know if my question was answered unless I go back to the blog or check my Disqus dashboard, which I never do. Too much work.

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Edward April 27, 2013 at 10:02 am

Thanks Anna for this post and more so for exposing Ripplin.

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Dragutin April 27, 2013 at 9:48 am

Thank you, Ana. Great skinny as always, especially your awesome slide presentation.

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 9:03 am

You are very welcome, Dragutin.

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Brian Dean April 27, 2013 at 9:33 am

Great Marketing Skinny, Ana! I just saw Alex’s post. Great stuff for SEO nerds like me : ).

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 9:03 am

Thanks for coming by, Brian!

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Adam April 27, 2013 at 9:13 am

Ana, another information packed marketing skinny, thanks!

I was lucky enough to dodge the RippIn emails, but i’m constantly surprised at the level of thought that goes into these kind of things - I wonder what good the people behind these could do if they put their creativity to better use?

I’m loving the SlideShare presentations in your roundups, especially the addition of WP Sharely ;)

Would like to add my two cents on meta keyword data.

I’d recommend against the use of meta keywords entirely, Google doesn’t look at them anymore and it can help your competitors. There’s also been a few reports that I’ve seen where the use has been tied to penalties, although that was usually because the site owner was hammering keywords.

Checked out a site the other day where the owner was really over doing it on the keyword tags, over 400 unique phrases (Doh!).

Good shout on the Empower post from Alex - possibly one of the best permalinks I’ve ever seen!

P.S. Mentioned you in an article last week - http://bloggingwizard.com/building-reader-engagement-tools-tactics/

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Ana Hoffman April 28, 2013 at 9:02 am

Thanks so much for letting me know about your mention, Adam - hate it when I don’t get a pingback and it wasn’t even in my Google Analytics yet… Added it to the post and a huge THANK YOU!

Meta keywords: I completely agree; there’s no benefit in adding them, but it can be abused so easily that it’s better to stay away altogether. Plus, some smart SEOs can easily reverse engineer your keywords by simply looking up your meta keywords.

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