electro acoustic expressionism
nodepet
January 16th, 2009

bigfinder – another perfect match for the filters

Filed under: Web — olliver @ 12:07 h

One would think a search engine has a vital interest in not becoming a nuisance to webmasters if it tries to advertise paid listings for websites. In this case, any form of Black Hat SEO directed at potential webmasters should immediately backfire. And if someone does opt for Black Hat SEO, then one would probably do it right in order not to endanger one’s money backend. Neither can be said about an outfit calling themselves bigfinder.de, which were hitting my blog this morning from an ip range I must have overlooked (probably because no flavour of abuse had originated from there). Anyway, time to put up some evidence from the logfiles:

83.133.125.202 – - [16/Jan/2009:06:18:34 +0100] www.nodepet.com “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 42235 “-” “-”
83.133.125.202 – - [16/Jan/2009:06:18:35 +0100] www.nodepet.com “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 42235 “-” “-”
83.133.125.202 – - [16/Jan/2009:06:18:41 +0100] www.nodepet.com “GET / HTTP/1.1″ 200 42235 “http://www.BigFinder.de/” “Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; de)”
83.133.125.202 – - [16/Jan/2009:06:18:41 +0100] www.nodepet.com “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 42235 “-” “-”
83.133.125.202 – - [16/Jan/2009:06:18:42 +0100] www.nodepet.com “GET / HTTP/1.0″ 200 17642 “-” “-”
83.133.125.202 – - [16/Jan/2009:07:00:39 +0100] www.nodepet.com “GET / HTTP/1.1″ 200 17642 “http://www.bigfinder.de/index.php” “T-Online Browser (Windows NT 5.1; U; de)”
83.133.125.202 – - [16/Jan/2009:08:04:08 +0100] www.nodepet.com “GET / HTTP/1.1″ 200 17642 “http://www.bigfinder.de/index.php” “Mozilla/3.01 (compatible;)”

As you can see, the bot does not look for robots.txt, constantly changes its user agent string and leaves fake referrers pointing at bigfinder.de. To me, this looks like referrer spam with badly falsified browser strings and the target sitting on the same address as the bot:

olliver@bunkiten:~$ host www.bigfinder.de
www.bigfinder.de has address 83.133.125.202

So who are bigfinder.de and what is their mission? According to http://www.bigfinder.de/ueber.php some firm called projectnet run by Gert Kambartel is behind this operation. Their goals look quite interesting (as in peculiar):

Vorbei sind die Zeiten der “Ranking-Olympiaden” !!!

Bei BigFinder.de gibt es kein Ranking mehr. Hier hat jeder Eintrag die gleiche Chance, gefunden zu werden. Die Einträge werden gemäß der eingegebenen Suchworte per Zufall ermittelt. Das heißt, daß keine Einträge mehr für “ewig” auf den vordersten Plätzen stehen. Jeder Eintrag wird statistisch gesehen genau so oft angezeigt, wie die anderen, egal, wie “groß” oder wie “bekannt” eine Seite ist.

(source: http://www.bigfinder.de/ueber.php)

This translates to:

Gone are the days of “ranking olympics” !!!
At Bigfinder.de a ranking no longer exists. Here, each entry has the same chance of being found. Entries are randomly determined according to the given keywords. That is, no longer are results on top positions “eternally”. Each entry is, statistically seen, displayed as often as any other, no matter how “large” or “known” a site is.

The notion I dislike is that there is some elite hogging up the search engines and this would be the only reason for some sites not to be found in search engines. Also this begs the notion of each site delivering the same degree of relevance for a search query, which is of course far from reality. Quite unsurprisingly, under http://www.bigfinder.de/mieten1.php you can find the bait for a guarantueed listing:

Können Sie sich vorstellen, in der größten und bekanntesten Suchmaschine auf Platz 1, 2 oder 3 zu stehen? Sie würden eine ungeahnte Menge an Besuchern auf Ihre Webseite bekommen. Davon träumen mit Sicherheit Millionen von Webseitenbetreibern, die alle etwas auf ihrer Webseite anzubieten haben.

(source: http://www.bigfinder.de/mieten1.php)

translation:

Could you imagine being listed at first, second or third position in the largest and best known search engines? You would get an inconceivable amount of visits to your website. Surely that is something millions of webmasters who offer something on their website are dreaming of.

Obviously, this is based on the notion that top ranking for any keyword results in a lot of traffic. High traffic only applies to top positions for highly competitive terms and even that does not automatically mean a high conversion rate for commercial websites. And there lies the core of the problem: ultimately it is the website and its content that matters.

And finally:

Und genau so funktioniert die Top-Positionierung bei BigFinder.de.
Sie mieten einen oder mehrere für Sie wichtige Suchbegriffe für je 10,00 EUR/Jahr (zuzgl. 19,00 % MwSt.)! Jedesmal, wenn dann ein User nach diesem Begriff sucht, erscheint Ihre Webseite auf einem der Plätze 1-3 in der Trefferliste.

(source: http://www.bigfinder.de/mieten1.php)

translation:

And this is how top-ranking at bigfinder.de works:
You rent one or several search terms that matter to you for Euro 10.00 per year (incl. 19.00 % VAT)! Each time a user is looking for this term your website will appear on one of the top three positions in the results returned.

So as a summary, bigfinder.de wants to make people believe that sponsored and organic search results are identical and top rankings in any search engine automatically result in lots of traffic. There is also the implication that each site is of the same quality and can convert traffic to sales equally. To me, this is clearly aiming at easily gullible folks with little knowledge about how the web actually works. Furthermore, there is a financial incentive for this “search engine” to leave phony marks in webmasters’ server logs.

Looking more closely, I wonder why the search engine has to prominently display the amount of domains and supposed number of concurrent visitors on its pages:

13.491.148 Domains, 169 Besucher online

(this is what it claimed at 10:38 h CET)

Combine this with the hourly fake visits and you cannot exclude the possibility that someone is trying to artificially inflate one’s relevance by means of fake numbers and visitors. This is something regulars of a major SEO forum in Germany have been wondering about for a while, too:

I once contacted this guy via email. This guy was snotty and proud of his peculiar site.

I sent him a list of prohibited sites. Since then, I no longer received “pseudo requests”.

translation by me, original source: BigFinder replaces OttoSuch (in German only)

Hello,
I own a homepage and noticed in my web statistics that some visitors originated from bigfinder.de. I then went to their site and rented several keywords for 10 Euros a year.

Now there are more “visitors” who reach my homepage via BigFinder. However, I suspect that BigFinder’s clicks on my site are automatically generated.

Not a single customer came to me this way. Via Google there are several regularly. I assume that this is technically feasible without any effort. But does anyone of you know more about that? Do other users suspect manipulation, too?

Does anyone know anything helpful about it?

translation by me, original source: Bigfinder Search Engine (in German only)

Like I wrote in my introduction: In case this is really a scam, it would be rather silly to have all requests originated from the same ip address as the official website and use badly faked browser strings. On the other hand, there is still a huge market of technically challenged and easily gullible webmasters who might end up paying the rent without getting anything in return. However, I don’t know whether it is a scam. There is merely some evidence suggesting that this search engine is intentionally planting fake referrers and there is a financial incentive for doing so. Additionally, there seems to be some kind of agreement that this engine does not result in real human visits, but even this might be the result of a biased sample.

What I do know, however, is that this bot exhibits an inacceptable behaviour and as it does not obey robots.txt there is no other way to opt out except of denying access to one’s website (or entire server).

Whois suggests the following about the ip range:

inetnum: 83.133.96.0 - 83.133.127.255
netname: LNCDE-GREATNET-NEWMEDIA
descr: Greatnet New Media.
country: DE
admin-c: FL1331-RIPE
tech-c: FL1331-RIPE
status: ASSIGNED PA
mnt-by: LNC-MNT
mnt-lower: LNC-MNT
source: RIPE # Filtered

person: Frazzetta Lindner
address: Greatnet New Media
address: Brentenstrasse 4a
address: D-83734 Hausham
address: Germany
phone: +49 1805 47328638
fax-no: +49 1805 444894696
nic-hdl: FL1331-RIPE
abuse-mailbox: abuse at greatnet.de
mnt-by: LNC-MNT
source: RIPE # Filtered

Greatnet is a German hosting outfit offering everything from websites to colocation, so they are safe to block without accidentally locking out human visitors. Plus you never know whether at some point in the future scrapers or web spammers will make this place their home and so the best prevention is to block first and make exceptions later.

Apache users on shared hosting may like to add

Deny from 83.133.96.0/19

to .htaccess or httpd.conf

Dedicated server owners may instead prefer to get rid of the noise altogether:

iptables -A INPUT -s 83.133.96.0/19 -i eth0 -p tcp -m tcp --syn -j REJECT

or the BOfH variant:

iptables -A INPUT -s 83.133.96.0/19 -i eth0 -j DROP

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January 15th, 2009

random reflections on a future release

Filed under: Music — olliver @ 19:40 h

My work for a new release is yielding surprisingly good results so far. Normally, much of my drafts are perfectly in line with Sturgeon’s Law, but this time I seem to work more efficiently. I noticed the tendency of going back to smaller sample units and a more synthetic approach, because I feel a need of more control of events within my music, especially finetuning spectromorphological details. Perhaps it is owned to my desire of more clarity and contrast. Also, there is still the thought about Giorgos’ approach of adding room illusion as another musical parameter. I think the degree of abstraction is increasing and the music will move away from its previous idioms as I look for new ways of organising events and creating structures. I don’t know when I shall be finished, as it depends on the number of promising drafts and to what degree I shall be able to get lost in my work, but I think it will be a larger one in terms of duration, but without any ambitions of creating several movements. And rest assured, I’m quite confident that this work won’t ever make it on the Stillstream playlist, just like any of my previous works ;-).

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January 11th, 2009

black trunks and white blanket

Filed under: Photo — olliver @ 23:56 h

Here are some more photos I took over the last few days. As you can see on some of them, most rivers, ponds and small lakes in the city are frozen and snow covered.

Bridge over Parthe I   Bridge over Parthe II   Bridge over Parthe III

Bridge over Parthe IV   Old cemetery I   Old cemetery II

Snowy ivy   Pillars and frozen pond I   Pillars and frozen pond II

Alley along the frozen Elster river   Wooden bridge   The old weeping willow

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January 8th, 2009

Snowy white, grey river and black trunks

Filed under: Photo — olliver @ 23:49 h

The day was quite pleasant for snapping pictures, because it was relatively mild with -5°C and calm. I took the chance to walk along the Parthe river which already began freezing over with larger ice floes slowly drifting downstream.

Parthe river I   Parthe river II   Parthe river III

On the following images you may like to try spotting the pond ;-). There is indeed one, but it is all frozen over and snow covered. I did not try to walk over the ice to the island in the middle of the pond, because I was not sure about the ice’s condition under the snow blanket.

Pond I   Pond II

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January 6th, 2009

Diamond dust and biting chill

Filed under: Misc — olliver @ 23:54 h

I could not take any pictures outside today, as the temperature did not cross the -16 °C mark. Especially in the shade the temperature is hard to bear for long, so I have to wait for moderate frost (-5 to -10 °C are ok). There was a rare phenomenom called diamond dust that could be observed today.

Diamond dust in contre jour   reduced visibility by diamond dust

On the left image you can see the diamond dust sparkling in contre jour (most notable in the right corner), whilst the second image gives an impression of the ice crystals’ density: The reduced visibility in the background is not caused by fog, it really is the result of diamond dust. As I’m writing this the temperature is around -20°C with freezing fog outside, should the sky clear up once more I expect the temperature to plummet. An impressive day and the second coldest I witnessed in my life (number one was -18°C in January 1987 with a very unpleasant strong wind).

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January 5th, 2009

Leipzig drowning in snow

Filed under: Misc — olliver @ 14:00 h

It’s quite a rare event to see so much snow here in the Leipzig area. Stunning 20-25 cm of snow and you have to go back decades to find a similar event in history. This is how it looks like from the building where I live:

snow covered Leipzig 2009, image one   snow covered Leipzig 2009, image two

Quite amazing :-). I’m looking forward to taking a lot of pictures during the next days.

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January 4th, 2009

2009 – a first impression

Filed under: Life — olliver @ 20:11 h

2009 – another new year, another innocently looking child with the future in its hands. For me it began rather miserable – the first cold I caught in nearly seven years. I submitted some of my music to Stillstream, a rather large ambient netradio station, and was surprised to learn just the next day that the founder of the radio himself had downloaded the files and and even confirmed it per email, stating he would probably give it a listen within the week. So apparently it’s under evaluation but I don’t expect Stillstrean to accept it, because I reckon the music is too complicated for their clientele. I’m curious about the rejection message, though. Perhaps they do not get back to me at all to avoid troubleful conversations with deadly offended musicians – in my experience it’s the mediocre poseurs who scream the loudest insisting on their right to entitlement.

Let’s switch to the Dutch John Peel and his NTNS netradio show. Last autumn, two Petcord releases were featured in this show:
Frontal Grid by me and Steven’s Drifts 1-4. Now that the old year’s gone, Mark compiled his traditional “best of” compilation for the last quarter of the past year and surprisingly both Steven and me made it on his compilation. Has it made any impact yet? Not really, according to my server logs. But it would be surprising to see many visitors clicking all the links on the pages ;-).

The weather is not less interesting this year. Having had an unusually long lasting cold spell since Christmas, a thick blanket of snow has been added to the mix since yesterday (and it’s still snowing). As the cold spell will last at least for another week, this means I finally, after years of missed opportunities, will be able to shoot a b/w series of winter pictures. The problem with the region I life in is that you either have a cold spell without snow or a snow blanket that hardly survives the next day. Rarely can you have it both ways and this is the reason why there’s not much snow to be seen on my winter pictures.

What else could happen this year?

I don’t know. Unlike previous years, I haven’t got the slightest idea. The child is irritatedly looking at me, expecting me to react in some kind of a way. I opt for passing by, as too often have I announced things that did or could not take place. Annoucements seem the best way to destroy events, because by the time the word is out, they have to happen. They were simply thrown into this world without any choice given. Sometimes they are superceded by unexpected turns in life one cannot foresee:
I could as well be insane a few months. Rather than completing another composition or project, I could be busy with taking my medicine, staring at a white wall and unconsciously drawing circles and loops on a piece of paper. Fuzzy memories of a past life, blurred faces, voices and smells. I might face a sudden death, one second aware of myself playing the piano and another surrounded by darkness and nothingness. Maybe the other second is like watching my body fall over the keyboard and wondering about the force driving me upwards. Nobody knows.

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