25
Apr

US Court Says META Keywords Tag Doesn’t Matter for SEO

April 25th, 2008 by James Omdahl


First off, apologies for the lack of posts over the last week. I was out of the office so things got a bit stale. I’m playing a bit of catch-up on work, but hopefully the posts will settle back to their regular intervals now.

I’ve been digging through my feed reader today and finding a number of gems. The greatest in my option that I have run across so far is a post from Barry Schwartz titled US Court Learns SEO, Decides META Keywords Don’t Matter.

The post discusses the recent case Standard Process v. Banks which looked at trademark infringement as it related to SEO. In the process of deciding the outcome of the case, the court got up to date on SEO and decided that the use of META keyword tags was immaterial to the ranking of a particular webpage.

Barry’s post is based off the analysis from law professor Eric Goldman, which can be found here, which includes a quote that I love. It is:

Lawyers, on the other hand, have been living in a parallel fantasy universe where keyword metatags single-handedly divert unwaveringly brand-loyal customers to piratical competitors.

Gotta love that.

This brings up an interesting SEO tactic - don’t try to figure out SEO, let the courts do it for you.

Kidding.

Two more articles of SEO interest for you to peruse over the weekend:

Diagnosing The SEO Health of Your Website by Jill Whalen
Link Development Tool Shortcuts for Firefox by Rae Hoffman

Related posts:

  1. Meta Tags - Do They Even Matter? I am back from a short vacation and ready to...
  2. Rapid Keyword - 31,000 Keywords in 5 Minutes The same affiliate who suggested the Keyword Tumbler suggested a...
  3. SEOpen Extension for Mozilla Firefox If you are a Firefox user practicing search engine optimization,...
  4. My Phone Says You Love Me So, do you really love me? My phone says you...
  5. SEO Book’s SEO Firefox Plug-in It’s Friday, you’re an affiliate, and it is getting late...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Share & Enjoy:
  • Digg!
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon!
  • Thumb This!

Leave a Reply