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What a coincidence! Just yesterday, before Google made the statement, I had mentioned it in my blog: "The primary factor to evaluate before investing in parasite SEO is whether your content aligns with the intent of the third-party domain or subdomain. If there is a match, it can be a win-win proposition for both parties and beneficial in the long term."

x.com/glenngabe/status/1849588

Yesterday, I published this blog that not only got indexed quickly but also started to rank, without a single backlink; happened earlier too. Google "pros and cons of parasite seo".

SEO does not take ages; quick results are possible by proper implementation. It depends on various factors, but they all depend on how well are your website's E-E-A-T factors. Of course, there are exceptions like Reddit. But, even with Reddit there's no magic - it took years to get that level.

Edit: Added image.

@heysannidhi Ignore that idiot.

There is no "site reputation abuse algorithm". There never was. It's a policy.

Policy <> algorithm

@michael_martinez Agree that it's a policy.

I was referring to the statement made by Google "Our systems aim to understand if a section of a site is independent or starkly different from the main content of the site." and my statement "The primary factor to evaluate before investing in parasite SEO is whether your content aligns with the intent of the third-party domain or subdomain. If there is a match, it can be a win-win proposition for both parties and beneficial in the long term."

@heysannidhi The thing to do before deciding whether to engage in that kind of SEO is to figure out who has actually received a penalty (manual action) and determine what they did differently from everyone else who did NOT get a penalty.

There is always a distinction that Google cares about.

Their use of the word "authority" implies it may have something to do with links.