Official statement
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Google claims that commenting on do-follow blogs does not negatively impact your reputation. However, these spaces attract a critical mass of comments, which dilutes the PageRank shared among all participants. For an SEO, this means that these links gradually lose their transmission value, making this tactic obsolete for strategic link building.
What you need to understand
Why does Google separate do-follow blogs from other types of links?
Do-follow blogs allow commentators to leave a link to their site without a nofollow attribute. This practice dates back to the early days of participatory web, where the idea was to encourage authentic exchanges by rewarding contributors with link juice.
The problem? These spaces have become massive spam grounds. Google had to adapt its algorithms to prevent millions of artificial links from polluting the web graph. Hence this reassuring statement: you will not be penalized if someone posts a spam comment linking to your site.
How does PageRank dilution work in this context?
The PageRank transmitted by a page gets divided among all the outgoing links present. If a blog post contains 200 do-follow comments, the available PR is fragmented among these 200 destinations.
Mathematically, each link receives a tiny share. A popular blog with 500 comments thus transmits a nearly negligible value per individual link. This is the mechanism Google is exposing here: the higher the volume of comments, the lower the unit value collapses.
What is Google's actual stance on these practices today?
Google does not directly penalize receiving backlinks from do-follow blogs. The algorithm considers that you do not control who cites you, so no manual penalty applies based solely on this criterion.
However, the transmitted value is now minimal. Google's engineers have calibrated their systems to automatically devalue these spammy environments. The implicit message: do not rely on these links to improve your rankings.
- Do-follow blogs do not generate a penalty if you receive links from these spaces
- PageRank is divided among all commentators, drastically reducing the unit value
- This dilution makes the tactic ineffective for strategic link building
- Google algorithmically devalues these environments without manual intervention
- The implicit recommendation: invest your time elsewhere to build a solid link profile
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement correspond to field observations from recent years?
Yes, completely. SEO practitioners have long observed that do-follow blog comments provide no real value. Correlation tests show a complete absence of impact on rankings, even with significant volumes.
What is interesting is the official confirmation of the PageRank dilution mechanism. Google openly acknowledges that the multiplication of outgoing links fragments the transmitted value. This transparency helps explain why these tactics ceased to work around 2010-2012.
What areas of uncertainty remain in this explanation?
Google remains vague on the exact dilution threshold. At what point do comments render a link completely useless? 50? 200? 1000? No quantifiable data supports the statement. [To be verified]
Similarly, the statement does not address the quality signals Google applies to these environments. Does a moderated blog with 30 relevant comments transmit more value than a spammy space with 500 links? Probably, but Google does not clarify. [To be verified]
In what cases might this logic not apply?
A highly targeted niche blog, with an engaged community and few comments per article, could theoretically still transmit some value. If a substantive article generates 10 quality exchanges, the PR does not yet dilute massively.
But let's be honest: this is the exception. Most open do-follow blogs are spam pits where no one reads the comments. Google knows this and has calibrated its filters accordingly.
Practical impact and recommendations
Should you still comment on do-follow blogs hoping for an SEO effect?
No. This tactic belongs to 2000s SEO and yields no benefits now. The time spent posting generic comments generates no measurable return on your organic positions.
If you do comment, do it to build a relationship with the author or community, not for the link. In this case, whether the link is do-follow or nofollow makes no difference to the goal.
How should you manage do-follow comments on your own site?
If you run a blog, set comments to nofollow by default. This cuts down on automated spam and prevents the dispersal of your PageRank to uncontrolled destinations.
Use advanced moderation plugins like Akismet or CleanTalk. These tools filter out 99% of automated spam and help you maintain a clean comments section without spending hours on it.
What strategic alternatives should you prioritize to build a solid link profile?
Invest in linkable content: case studies, original data, infographics, free tools. These formats naturally attract quality links from authoritative sites.
Targeted guest blogging in sector-specific media with a real editorial line remains effective. A substantive article published on a referring site transmits infinitely more value than 1000 blog comments.
The Digital PR strategy enables you to gain mentions in mainstream media. These links are not divided among 500 commentators; they point directly to you with strong editorial context.
- Stop wasting time commenting on do-follow blogs for SEO
- Set your own comments to nofollow if you manage a WordPress blog
- Invest in creating linkable content instead of low-value tactics
- Prioritize targeted guest blogging in quality sector-specific media
- Explore Digital PR to gain contextualized links from authoritative sources
- Audit your current link profile to identify and disavow spammy backlinks from these environments
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un commentaire do-follow peut-il pénaliser mon site si quelqu'un poste un lien spam vers moi ?
Combien de commentaires faut-il pour que le PageRank devienne négligeable ?
Les liens nofollow ont-ils plus de valeur que les do-follow dilués dans ce contexte ?
Faut-il désavouer les backlinks reçus depuis des blogs do-follow spammés ?
Un blog modéré avec peu de commentaires transmet-il encore du PageRank efficacement ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 2 min · published on 22/02/2010
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