NoFollow-Free Paradise - Welcome to IRC bot logs!
Feb 05, 2008 I blackhat, linkbuilding.I’m going to be honest, I have another friggin headache, and i’m in a bitchy mood. I’ve had these things for a month now! That being said, I’ve not felt decent enough to code this “idea” but I know for a fact it works as I have been manually playing with it for a week now. Everyone uses IRC right? Internet Relay Chat? Have you noticed how many channels have logging bots? Guess what, a ton of those collect urls and post them on a channel stats page. The majority dont use ref=”nofollow” — hell, I’ve not found one that does! There are literally thousands of channels that do this — and every single one of those channels can give you some link juice from a domain that probably has some pagerank, trustrank, or whatever the new google bullshit “rank” system is!
I’m not an advocate for blackhat or spamming — I mean, I do it, but only because its a necessary evil. Its like steroids in baseball - the big guys do it. That being said, grab yourself a few perl or php books and get crackin’. Find a few channels, write a script, and randomly join an irc channel and dump a link or two. Guess what - it works. If I get feeling better, I’ll throw some code at you guys that are slackin and just looking for free links. Remember, use proxies and dont flood them …










barman Says:
deStone this idea is bound to make millions. You’re a god damn genius.
Feb 05, 2008, 9:38 pmricardo Says:
What a great idea, I just subscribed to your feed
Feb 05, 2008, 12:45 pmcrypt Says:
YOU STUPID FUCK! YOU ARE BETTER OFF CLOSING THIS BLOG YOU STUPID PIECE OF SHIT! YOU AND YOUR IDEAS ARE WORTHLESS.
Feb 05, 2008, 12:57 pmT0bsn Says:
Starfish are capable of both sexual and asexual reproduction. Individual starfish are male or female. Fertilization takes place externally, both male and female releasing their gametes into the environment. Resulting fertilized embryos form part of the zooplankton.
Starfish are developmentally (embryologically) known as deuterostomes. Their embryo initially develops bilateral symmetry, indicating that starfish probably share a common ancestor with the chordates, which includes the fish. Later development takes a very different path however as the developing starfish settles out of the zooplankton and develops the characteristic radial symmetry. Some species reproduce cooperatively, using environmental signals to coordinate the timing of gamete release; in other species, one to one pairing is the norm.
Some species of starfish also reproduce asexually by fragmentation, often with part of an arm becoming detached and eventually developing into an independent individual starfish. This has led to some notoriety. Starfish can be pests to fishermen who make their living on the capture of clams and other mollusks at sea as starfish prey on these. The fishermen would presumably kill the starfish by chopping them up and disposing of them at sea, ultimately leading to their increased numbers until the issue was better understood. A starfish arm can only regenerate into a whole new organism if some of the central ring of the starfish is part of the chopped off arm.
Feb 05, 2008, 1:04 pmblack hat seo Says:
what crypt said
Feb 05, 2008, 1:07 pmdeStone Says:
i’m glad to know that you guys are thinking about me while I’m at work slaving away for the man.
Feb 05, 2008, 1:08 pmT0bsn Says:
i like starfish!
Feb 05, 2008, 1:11 pmblack hat seo Says:
Turritopsis nutricula jellyfish — After becoming a sexually mature adult, the jellyfish Turritopsis nutricula can transform itself back into a child (the polyp stage) using the cell conversion process of transdifferentiation. The Turritopsis nutricula repeats this cycle, meaning that it may be essentially immortal, though it is mortal in the sense that it can be killed.
Feb 05, 2008, 1:12 pmaltek Says:
giveus sample channels in a new post
Feb 05, 2008, 11:21 amm0nkeydust Says:
lol, what the actual fuck?
Feb 05, 2008, 6:56 amgood idea btw
Natel Says:
Why use proxies???,to avoid being banned?
Feb 05, 2008, 3:04 am