Matt Cutts - the one who recently
thought about spam - today introduced a new way of dealing with low content sites created specifically for search engine promotion and advertising revenue.
He invites Chrome users to install an experimental
Personal Blocklist extension that allows sites to be removed from Google search results. The extension will send information about blocked sites to Google, and Google will study the information received and use it as one of the criteria for filtering the overall search results.
It looks like this:
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When you delete a site using this extension, you will no longer see this domain in the Google search results. If you change your mind, you can cancel the site deletion at the bottom of the search results page at any time:
You can also edit the list of blocked sites by clicking on the extension icon in the upper right part of the Chrome window:
The extension is available in English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and Turkish.