The pingback protocol specifies a method for CMS software to alert another Web site that someone's posted something linking to the other Web site. This might have some value for SE sites -- there's some SEO value, but it's also a great way to automatically increase awareness of SE sites on topic-relevant blogs. Is this something that's ever been considered?

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I would really like that, but prepare for posts saying "This isn't a blog/forum!" – TheLQ Sep 15 '10 at 22:10
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I agree 100% -- part of the big education process over on RPG.SE is explaining that to people. But pingback isn't restricted to blogs -- it's just a way to notify people that a piece of content they wrote got a link from somewhere else, which I think is wholly within our scope. – Bryant Sep 16 '10 at 14:49
So that's what that crazy "pingback" thing that I see every now and then is? It drives me nuts and I just mentally filter out those comments nowadays. Now I know what it's used for, but I'm not one who can really judge how useful it'll be. – Grace Note Sep 16 '10 at 19:29
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I think this is an excellent idea. I think it may need clarification for those unfamiliar with it. If someone references a URL in a question, answer or comment, SE should contact the targetted web-site and inform it that StackOverflow is referencing it. The targetted site can ignore such notifications or display that reference however it likes. Blog software often treats it like a special sort of comment. – Oddthinking Nov 13 '10 at 2:44
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I note that at least one of the SE clones, that are (legally) reproducing SO questions is doing pingbacks, so they are getting references across many blogs. – Oddthinking Nov 13 '10 at 2:45
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