Fri 27 Apr 2007
The Plugin
BlogFollow automatically puts a snippet from the commentor’s blog into the comment. Kind of like a signature to the comment. Full details and download link are now available.
The Reasoning
I read a post on the blog FuzzyFuture the other day that intrigued me. The post was about the “iFollow” movement, which calls for the removal of the nofollow tag from comment links. The thought being to encourage user participation, by providing a reward. I love the concept, but I think the implementation misses the mark.
Maybe I’m being idealistic, but removing the nofollow link is a tangible reward in the sense it helps SEO and PR, not by driving readers to the commenter’s blog. An actual human reader has no concept of what attributes are assigned to the link. Therefor the only way this helps drive actual readers is indirectly through improved search ranking. But much of the value in SEO/PR is in increased ad sales.
It’s pretty clear the iFollow movement doesn’t really increase traffic to the blog directly from the comment. That’s why I created the BlogFollow plugin.
A lot of what my bloglines subscriptions are sites I found from comments left in other sites. I’ll read a comment, if I feel it’s intelligent, informative or entertaining I’ll often click on their name to see what their site is like. I’ll generally subscribe to the site if it looks halfway decent and give it a few weeks trial.
I hope the BlogFollow plugin will help with clickthrus on comments. It gives a bit more content from the commentor to help encourage users to click. I like this approach over iFollow because it drives users directly to the commentor’s blog.
Both parties win. The blog running the plugin would conceivable get more content and user interaction. The commentor’s get their blog presented to a wider audience.
The Spam Issue
The obvious concern is an increase in spam. I think this will be minimal because the comment itself still has to get through whatever akisment, spamblocker, spam mutilator your already running. Conceivably someone could put up a blog of \/iagra links and hot stock tips, then go leave meaningful comments to get their content on your site. However blogfollow strips out all html/javasript, so there won’t be any actual links (other than the one set by the plugin in the post title) or XSS attacks.
Yes, someone could use the permalink in their feed to point to something spammy and then go around and write great comments to trick people into clicking the link. In the end it’s still up to the site owner to police their own site.
The plugin is running on this blog right now, so go ahead and leave a comment on this post to see it in action.
Popularity: 9% [?]










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April 27th, 2007 at 9:13 pm
This comment is to show the plugin in action.
May 2nd, 2007 at 11:47 am
Really like the idea of this plugin - just have to wait to upgrade to PHP5…
May 2nd, 2007 at 7:03 pm
turnipHed,
I was pretty sure the plugin worked in PHP4, I just hadn’t tested it. I setup a PHP 4.4.5 instance and at first glance everything looks good. Give it a shot and if you have issues let me know.
June 6th, 2007 at 5:54 pm
Wow .. looks cool. However the links still see to have a nofollow on them. Is this by design ?
June 13th, 2007 at 5:28 am
Owen,
This plugin does include the nofollow by default. If you want it off you can use one of the many plugins that automatically remove it.
I’m doing that with this blog, but it doesn’t seem to be working at the moment. Probably something to do with the order the plugins are applied.
June 23rd, 2007 at 10:59 pm
I can’t get the plugin to work on my blog. I followed all the steps, so I don’t know what I’m doing wrong.
June 23rd, 2007 at 11:51 pm
Elizabeth,
Did you get any errors?
What version of WordPress and PHP are you using?
-Matt
October 1st, 2007 at 4:21 pm
OK so I have PHP 5.2.2 now and tried to install this plugin because I am really excited to use it; however I have hit a glitch…..
I have this error on the blog pages
WordPress database error: [Table 'turnip_wrdp1.wp_blogfollow' doesn't exist]
SELECT * FROM `wp_comments` AS c LEFT JOIN `wp_blogfollow` AS cf ON cf.site = c.comment_author_url WHERE c.comment_post_ID = 347 AND c.comment_approved = ‘1′
And if I try and access the plugin via the browser I get
Fatal error: Call to undefined function add_action() in /home/turnip/public_html/wp-content/plugins/blogfollow.php on line 25
So now I am really confused….
October 1st, 2007 at 7:41 pm
Hey Turniphead,
Looks like the database table wasn’t created. You can try to uninstall and reinstall. What version of WordPress you using?
October 11th, 2007 at 3:47 pm
All of a sudden today it worked! I got rid of WP-Cache cause it was screwing other stuff up - and poof it showed up!
I am using 2.2.2
December 2nd, 2007 at 9:47 pm
I like the idea of this because I get a lot of comments from other music bloggers who also have content relevant to my readers.
Cheers!
Ned