the relocation performed by counter.cfm (to take you to example.com) would NOT be indexed or followed by spiders/robots

SEO firms will tell you to avoid ALL meta refreshes or relocation techniques (we're in the middle of SEO right now for one of our client sites)

HTH

Cheers

Bryan Stevenson B.Comm.
VP & Director of E-Commerce Development
Electric Edge Systems Group Inc.
t. 250.920.8830
e. [EMAIL PROTECTED]

---------------------------------------------------------
Macromedia Associate Partner
www.macromedia.com
---------------------------------------------------------
Vancouver Island ColdFusion Users Group
Founder & Director
www.cfug-vancouverisland.com
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Andrew Grosset
  To: CF-Talk
  Sent: Thursday, July 15, 2004 11:44 AM
  Subject: Re: counting clicks on links - search engines

  Many thanks, that's an excellent idea.

  regards, Andrew.

  > On Wed, 14 Jul 2004 18:41:17 -0400, Andrew Grosset <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  > com> wrote:
  > > My question is: will the search engines follow that link to the
  > final destination and
  > > would cflocation be best used or a meta refresh in the link_counter.
  > cfm page?
  >
  > As I understand it, that won't work very well. Much of the benefit of
  > link directories lies in the search engines counting how many other
  > sites link to a particular site, to calculate the site's perceived
  > importance. Search engine spiders wouldn't see your example link as a
  > link to houseoffusion... they'd see it as a link to the same site. I
  > believe cflocation sends a 301 "moved" header (I could be wrong, I
  > always get 301 and 302 mixed up) so search engines might be hesitant
  > to consider it a permanent link. Ditto with meta refresh... most
  > spiders just won't bother following it.
  >
  > Here's how I'm planning on building a link directory for a tourism
  > site I'm involved with:
  >
  > <a href="">   > >   > false">Example Site</a>
  >
  > (onclick can be a function or whatever counting method you want)
  >
  > Spiders (and other _javascript_ disabled user agents) will follow the
  > href link... other users will use the script and count the hit. It
  > won't be perfect (ie, it won't count non-js agents) but I think it's
  > a
  > good alternative and is search engine friendly.
  >
  > --
  > Kay Smoljak
  > http://kay.smoljak.
  com
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