1. Right-click the web page.
2. View the source code.
3. Look for rel=nofollow.
If it has rel=nofollow, then it is a nofollow link, else it is a do follow link.
OR
Use the NoDoFollow plug-in for Mozilla Firefox.
Links will be shaded, pink/red are nofollow links.
Links shaded in blue are dofollow links.1. Right-click the web page.
2. View the source code.
3. Look for rel=nofollow.
If it has rel=nofollow, then it is a nofollow link, else it is a do follow link.
OR
Use the NoDoFollow plug-in for Mozilla Firefox.
Links will be shaded, pink/red are nofollow links.
Links shaded in blue are dofollow links.
Thank you for the information. This do-follow and no-follow link is new to me. My understanding is not very clear yet although my idea is the do-follow allows you to use it while the no-follow has no use for the user. Please correct me if I’m wrong on my understanding of the no-follow and do-follow link.Thank you for the information. This do-follow and no-follow link is new to me. My understanding is not very clear yet although my idea is the do-follow allows you to use it while the no-follow has no use for the user. Please correct me if I’m wrong on my understanding of the no-follow and do-follow link.
Francis
2. View the source code.
3. Look for rel=nofollow.
If it has rel=nofollow, then it is a nofollow link, else it is a do follow link.
OR
Use the NoDoFollow plug-in for Mozilla Firefox.
Links will be shaded, pink/red are nofollow links.
Links shaded in blue are dofollow links. 1. Right-click the web page. 2. View the source code. 3. Look for rel=nofollow. If it has rel=nofollow, then it is a nofollow link, else it is a do follow link. OR Use the NoDoFollow plug-in for Mozilla Firefox. Links will be shaded, pink/red are nofollow links. Links shaded in blue are dofollow links.
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