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Ping (blogging)

Push mechanism for web content


Push mechanism for web content

Note

the web publishing mechanism

In blogging, a ping is an XML-RPC-based push mechanism by which a weblog notifies a server that its content has been updated. An XML-RPC signal is sent from the weblog to one or more ping servers, as specified by originating weblog), to notify a list of their "services" of new content on the weblog.

A ping server may notify multiple services when pinged;

  • Search engines
  • Website directories
  • News websites
  • Aggregators
  • Feed websites

Adoptions

Server adoption

The technology was first introduced by Dave Winer to Weblogs.com in October 2001. The site was powered by receiving pings from individual blog and podcast websites using weblogUpdates.ping() calls over the XML-RPC protocol. The server protocol was later adopted by FeedBurner's Pingshot, Automattic's Ping-O-Matic, Google Blogsearch, Källström's Twingly, and others.

Open ping servers, like Moreover Technologies' Weblogs.com, let other web services subscribe to a list of blogs that have recently pinged them. Blog search engines can provide fresh results very quickly by polling only the newly updated blogs. Similarly, aggregators use results from ping servers to tell subscribers which items on their subscription lists have fresh material.

In addition to open ping servers, there are also proprietary ping servers that gather information only for their own applications. Most of the major blog search engines operate such ping servers, and most content management systems and blogs provide an easy way to modify ping services.

Client adoption

WordPress has included a ping client since its first release in 2003, which used Weblogs.com as its ping server until 2004. It now uses Automattic's Ping-O-Matic.

In 2005, Apple released Weblog Server as part of Mac OS X Server, which was based on the Blojsom open-source project and used Ping-O-Matic as its ping server.

In 2006, Geeklog added support for ping servers, using Ping-O-Matic by default.

As of 2016, most blog authoring tools automatically ping one or more servers each time the blogger creates a new post or updates an old one.

Ping spam

Main article: Sping

The use of ping servers to direct attention to recent blog posts has led to a rash of ping spam or sping, which attempts to direct readers to web pages that are not, in fact, recent blog posts. Examples:

  • Product vendors who use a weblog-like format to post product ads, meaningless batches of Google keywords, etc.
  • Software vendors, who sell scripts that make automated "weblog postings" every hour around the clock.

Creators of ping spam or spam blogs may hope to benefit by creating pages to turn up in web searches for popular keywords. Typically, an individual spam post links to some external page that displays Google ads or offers a product for sale.

Although pinging adds no value to a website's rank-ability in search engines, it does help search engine Web crawlers discover content quicker, which may give it (the content) the visibility needed to attract traffic (often resulting in conversions such as sharing the website, which means additional backlinks, social shares, etc., which does help a website rank.

References

pt:Ping

References

  1. Winer, Dave. (30 September 2001). "Weblogs.Com XML-RPC interface".
  2. Marchuk, Serge. "AllStuffWeb.com - What Websites does a Ping Service Ping". allstuffweb.com.
  3. Winer, Dave. (2001-10-21). "Getting ready to flip the switch". Weblogs.com.
  4. "Got blog? Will ping.".
  5. (6 October 2006). "Ping Google Blog Search Engine".
  6. Rowse, Darren. (2006-10-06). "Google Blog Search Offers Pinging to Get Your Blog Indexed".
  7. "Twingly RPC Ping API".
  8. (2003-05-22). "So Close".
  9. Mullenweg, Matt. (2003-05-27). "WordPress Now Available".
  10. (28 June 2004). "Apple Previews Mac OS X Server "Tiger"".
  11. (28 April 2005). "Ping-O-Matic in Blojsom".
  12. (2005-11-25). "Sending a Ping in Geeklog 1.4".
  13. (2006-02-05). "Geeklog 1.4.0".
  14. (2006-02-10). "Geeklog Sees the Light".
  15. Baker, Loren. (2005-01-19). "Can A Ping Really Help Your Blog Get Top Search Engine Rankings?". searchenginejournal.com.
  16. Moss, Alex. (2013-04-19). "5 Basic Tips to Improve SEO and the User Experience". searchenginewatch.com.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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