Leaving your footprint when Blog Commenting

4 replies
Blog Commenting, Leaving my foot print.

If I comment on some blogs, I mean proper relevant comments that interact with a almost 100% approval history so far, can Google see the IP address they came from any way?

eg, I own 10 sites, every morning I do one comment for 5 totally different sites, would this link the sites doing this action form the same computer with the same IP?

Thanks
#blog #commenting #footprint #leaving
  • Profile picture of the author webapex
    I can't imagine so, although if analytics is installed that may have the capability of matching recorded IPs to comment date/times on the next spidering, odds are the comments are only reexamined on the next spider visit, and the IP information is not accessible by other means. Comments are probably not important enough big picture wise, for them to bother.

    If one of your comments get flagged by Askimet, all of those associated with the same IP could? be shot down.
    Signature

    “An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field” Niels Bohr

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[4854160].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author blogworker
    i also do the similar thing with you. i think it is OK, at least, till now, it's OK. but what i keep in mind is not comment in spam things, but real information, I mean useful information. if your comments are useful, even Google knows they all from the same IP, i think it will also OK.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[4854593].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author lotsofsnow
    While I am sure that Google could know but I guess they don't care about this.

    If you would overdo it and create hundreds of comments every day you might wake them up though.
    Signature

    Call Center Fuel - High Volume Data
    Delivering the highest quality leads in virtually all consumer verticals.

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[4854610].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author JSProjects
    If you're super paranoid then buy 5-10 private / semi-dedicated proxies and use those to post. It's what I do.

    Though I doubt Google, or anyone else, is going to care if you're manually posting a handful of high quality comments each day.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[4871644].message }}

Trending Topics