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A linkback is a method for Web authors to obtain notifications when other authors hyperlink to one of their documents. This enables authors to keep track of who is linking to, or referring to, their articles. The four methods (Refback, Trackback, Pingback and Webmention) differ in how they accomplish this task.
"LinkBack" is the generalized term we use to reference three methods of communication between Websites.[1]
Any of the four terms—Linkback, Trackback, Pingback, or (rarely) Refback—might also refer colloquially to items within a section upon the linked page that display the received notifications, usually along with a reciprocal link; Trackback is used most often for this purpose. Also, the word Trackback is often used colloquially to mean any kind of Linkback.
Dan Magarino, Morgan Stanley Equity Research, is credited with popularizing the term "linkback" and also contributed to its widespread adoption by RiXML.org.
JavaScript, Internet, Web browser, Cascading Style Sheets, Belgium
News, Photojournalism, Citizen journalism, War, Broadcast journalism
Google, Web analytics, Spamdexing, Bing, Dmoz
Search engine optimization, Atom (standard), Rss, Usenet, News
Rss, Web syndication, Xml, Google, Html
World Wide Web, Journalism, Search engine optimization, Web syndication, Atom (standard)
Journalism, Movable Type, Ping (blogging), Search engine optimization, Web syndication
Microblogging, Usenet, Journalism, Google, Islam
Journalism, Web syndication, Atom (standard), Rss, BitTorrent