It might be true that bloggers need commenters or commentators so that their blog will be looked like much active. This is the reason why bloggers employ some ways that will encourage reader to drop their comments regarding the posts they’re reading.
But what about if someone will only say, “hi! nice site”, “informative site” and other spammy-way of commenting? That will really piss me off.
Now, if I am embarrassed with the spammy-comments dropped on my blog, then you’ll expect me to be embarrassed with the company selling links on comments, because they’re not just promoting spam comments but also selling links from their spam comments.
I am talking about a company that sells links from spam comments because I know, there are lots of companies like that that exist, and one of them is the BuyBlogComments.com. For as low as $19.99 you can now have a hundred of links back to your blog through the comments on the blogs that don’t use “NO FOLLOW” attribute.
Buy Blog Comments.com offers
100 Blog Comments Only $19.99!
500 Blog Comments Only $99.99!
1000 Blog Comments Only $199.99!Finally you can purchase quality blog comments without the stress of finding someone to write the comments, or buying some high priced automated program. We specialize in selling blog comments for blackhatters who are looking for good quality backlinks. We have three different types of packages, you can either buy 100 blog comments, 500 blog comments, or 1000 blog comments at a time. . . .
Western bloggers like Darren, Strauss, etc are all against on this kind of business. John Chow favored it as a way of getting backlinks, but most of his followers go against it.
What’s the good things of it? Okay, it might be true that by buying comments, you’ll gain enough backlinks from other blogs. But what if the comments dropped on those blogs are just spammy ones? Remember this will only result to the deletion of those comments and it will be worst if you will be considered spammer.
I think, it will be better if you’ll be the one to write relevant comments than buying spammy ones.
By the way, Melo influenced me on this post.
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SELaplana, 14 July 2007 at 





July 15th, 2007 at 12:20 am
Personally I think way and I mean way to much is being made over this. Some bloggers in the dofollow community are actually talking about going back to adding nofollow over this. That is just plain stupid. The way I feel is simple is a person comments in my blogs, the comment is relevant and on topic and the link does not go to some “bad thing” and otherwise complies with my comment policy I am fine with it. Who actually wrote the comment and what the “intent” was means absolutely nothing to me only that it meets the rules of my personal comment policy.
Everyone needs to realize that this is nothing but the latest topic du jour and just have a beer and rock on with life. Basically those saying nofollow is the solution to this are saying,
Comment spam gave birth to rel=”nofollow”, people realized it did nothing to solve the problem and screwed over posters. So the do-follow movement occurred which has led to people comment spamming, which means we might as well use nofollow again, which did not work in the first place.
Sound like a circle of insanity? There’s a reason, it is!
The simple facts are if the comments are relevant to your blog, who cares if the poster or the guy who hired him gets some link juice? Anyone who does can’t see the forest for the trees! The reality is comments make your blog better; they improve your search traffic as well.
I believe all they hype around this is being swelled underground by Google because they hate the dofollow movement! They are trying to kill any paid links or any links a user can easily create or hire someone else to create. Why? Because they can’t fix their own algorithms, that’s why.
This “war on paid links” has nothing to do with quality and everything to do with money, don’t be fooled and stop worrying. The Internet has done fine for a long time now and it keeps getting better, like us or not SEOs are a big part of why
July 15th, 2007 at 8:35 am
Thanks for the link love, however I would like to request if you can change my name from Milo >>> Melo Villareal… Many thanks for visiting my blog as well… my pleasure
July 15th, 2007 at 3:13 pm
TO JACK: i think, you’re really right… the NOFOLLOW tag was created to kill spams but in reality it didn’t.
so, the very good thing to do is not to set back the NOFOLLOW thing because it doesn’t really works against spams, but to control your comments by your own making it sure that the comments drop, whether from someone selling comment links or from spammers, as long as the comment is relevant and do not link to bad neighborhood.
however, just like what you’ve said, Google go against the selling of links because it affects their search result, so it would be scary too if we’ll employ the DOFOLLOW into a blog because Google might punish blogs with it.
September 19th, 2007 at 6:39 pm
1000 posts on blogs for $200 means 20 cents for 1 post.
If I was about to buy their “service”, I’d ask them:
1) Do these 1000 blogs have different C-Class IP?
2) How can you achieve so low cost per post?
I think that after answering these questions, you’d avoid buying such “services”.
No-one (even Indians!) can work for 20 cents per post. If the post is relevant and valuable, then it is necessary to read the topic, others’ comments and leave a senseful message. Is this possible for 20 cents? No.