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    Backlinks are incoming links to a website or web page. Backlinks enable you to keep track of other pages on the web that link to your posts. The number of backlinks is an indication of the popularity or importance of that website or page. In basic link terminology, a backlink is any link received by a web node (web page, directory, website, or top level domain) from another web node (Björneborn and Ingwersen, 2004). Backlinks are also called incoming links, inbound links, inlinks, and inward links.
    Search engines often use the number of backlinks that a website has as one of the factors for determining that website's search engine ranking. For example, Google's PageRank algorithm uses backlinks to help determine a site's rank. To see a site's PageRank, you need to use the Google Toolbar for Microsoft's Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox, view the bar graph indicating a website's PageRank in Google's directory, or download the PageRank plugin for Mozilla Firefox.


        Backlink
            Obtaining BackLinks from search engines
            Technical implementations
            See also

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    Obtaining BackLinks from search engines

    Most commercial search engines provide a mechanism to determine the number of backlinks they have recorded to a particular web page. For example, Google can be searched using Google:link:wikipedia.org to find the number of pages on the Web pointing to http://wikipedia.org/. (link:en.wikipedia.org returns no results).

    Google frequently only shows a subset of all existing backlinks to a web page, possibly because of the network costs of providing this information. Yahoo! and MSN may give more accurate backlink counts. Yahoo!’s Site Explorer is a useful tool for obtaining backlinks from Yahoo!.

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    Technical implementations

    When HTML was designed, there was no explicit mechanism in the design to keep track of backlinks in software, as this carried additional logistical and network overhead. While Google does keep track of some HTML backlinks, the data can be delayed by hours or months, and backlink data is not kept for pages that Google doesn't watch, such as password-protected areas or dynamic pages.

    Some website software internally keeps track of backlinks. Examples of this include most wiki and CMS software.

    Other mechanisms have been developed to track backlinks between disparate webpages controlled by organizations that aren't associated with each other. The most notable example of this is TrackBacks between blogs.

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    See also
     
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    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Backlink". link