Just fyi folks - comment backlinks (even on .edu sites) don't carry the backlink SEO weight that they used to.
Not saying that they can't be useful as a secondary source of traffic (depending on the topic of the site) but
if you are looking at blog comment links to boost your backlink profile, it isn't going to give you the bump you
are hoping for.
Same thing with forum signature links.
what do you know when it comes to search engine optimization? or do you think SEO is bitcoin trading that changes constantly?link's .edu & .gov remain's one the MOST fundamental concept in seo because they are naturally obtain link in the eye's og google search engine.Thanks
BitcseoConsidering I've been doing SEO for two decades, I'd say I know a fair amount. As to whether or not forum sigs and
blog comment spam are good sources of backlinks:
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/66356 (read the section on Link Schemes)
also this handy little chart lays out what constitutes good SEO (note that the green items are DO items and the red
ones are DON'T DO items - check out item VI which specifically references blog and forum spam):
http://searchengineland.com/download/seotable/SearchEngineLand-Periodic-Table-of-SEO-2015.pdfIf you can get a NATURAL and RELEVANT link on an .edu or .gov site, that's great. But commenting on a .edu or .gov
blog post - even if you include a link in the comment - isn't going to do squat. In fact, there are strong enough
indicators that too many such links can hurt organic rankings.