Free Targetted Traffic

February 9th, 2006 at 5:25 am (Miscellanous, Net Buzz)

Hi Readers,

Last weekend, a few of our friends in the industry spoke to us about the lack of Targetted Traffic and how do they actually start getting them visitors. Well we introduced to them, TrafficSwarm. Its effective and works for us.

Here’s a brief write up on TrafficSwarm
Internet marketing is not a mystery, there are no “secret” formulas, and you do NOT need a guru. Success on the Internet comes down to one simple thing …. TRAFFIC!

When you have enough targeted traffic (targeted traffic simply means people who visit your website and are interested in what you offer) you make more sales, earn more affiliate commissions, grow a powerful mailing list faster … in short, you achieve your online goals in record time!

Ready to get your FREE traffic? Click here to join FREE!

Here are the six reasons you should join TrafficSwarm today!

1. TrafficSwarm is FREE: You just can’t beat the appeal of no-cost online advertising.
2. TrafficSwarm is Automated: Set it up in five minutes, then forget about it. Make time your ally today!
3. TrafficSwarm is Targeted: You’ll only get live, real-time targeted traffic. Real people choose to click on your ad. No fake traffic here.
4. TrafficSwarm is Cheat-Proof: Chiselers and click-bots can’t waste your credits. Our system ensures you get only real, targeted traffic.
5. TrafficSwarm is Viral: Traffic increases automatically and exponentially – like a swarm.
6. TrafficSwarm is Proven: Thousands of sites are now getting millions of visitors.

Over 250,000 members can’t be wrong! TrafficSwarm works! Now it can work for you!

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Google #1 In Search

January 21st, 2006 at 5:13 pm (Net Buzz)

The November 2005 figures from Nielsen//NetRatings on search share
didn’t change a bit from the month prior, as nearly 70 percent of
searches passed through Google or Yahoo.

At the top would be Google, which snared 46.3 percent of search
queries in November 2005. Almost 2.4 billion searches wound their
way through the Google server farms. Yahoo held its place at second
on this list, with a 23.4 percent share and 1.194 billion queries
received, parsed, and tossed back to the user.

That takes care of the billionaires of search share. MSN Search at
number three picked up 11.4 percent of the November ‘05 search
market, 583 million queries. AOL Search was tops in single digit
share, 6.9 percent and 350 million searches handled.

MyWay and Ask Jeeves trailed the big four, at fifth and sixth place.
Ask Jeeves owns MyWay and powers its search, so maybe the 2.5
percent and 2.3 percent of search share should be combined for the
two. Nielsen//NetRatings then listed EarthLink (which gets its
results from Google), Dogpile (a metasearch site), Netscape (Google
search results here too), and iWon (Ask Jeeves here) as the last
four on the list.

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Google Defies United States Over Search Data

January 6th, 2006 at 7:19 pm (Net Buzz, Rants & Raves)

The internet search engine Google is resisting efforts by the US Department of Justice to force it to hand over data about what people are looking for. Google was asked for information on the types of query submitted over a week, and the websites included in its index.

The department wants the data to try to show in court it has the right approach in enforcing an online pornography law. It says the order will not violate personal privacy, but Google says it is too broad and threatens trade secrets.

Privacy groups say any sample could reveal the identities of Google users indirectly. And they say the demand is a worrying precedent, because the government also wants to make more use of internet data for fighting crime and terrorism.

However, the Department of Justice has said that several of Google’s main competitors have already complied.The department first issued a request for the data last August.

It wants:

A list of terms entered into the search engine during an unspecified single week, potentially tens of millions of queries

A million randomly selected web addresses from various Google databases.
The US government is seeking to defend the 1998 Child Online Protection Act, which has been blocked by the Supreme Court because of legal challenges over how it is enforced.

Google’s refusal to comply prompted US Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to ask a federal judge in the state of California on Wednesday for an order to hand over the records.

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