Saturday, May 3, 2014

Google Provides More Clarity Around Sneaky Redirects Against Their Guidelines

Google Provides More Clarity Around Sneaky Redirects Against Their Guidelines


Google reported on their Webmaster blog that they have overhauled two of their rule archives to enhance the clarity around what subtle redirects are against Google Webmaster Guidelines. 

Google has stretched their rules to guarantee webmasters are mindful that utilizing subtle redirects through portable website identification and redirection, is not permitted if the substance is not the same. A portion from Google's reexamined rules show a circumstance where "desktop clients get an ordinary page, while versatile clients are redirected to a totally distinctive spam space," as not as per Google's rules. 

Here are the two new samples Google set in their subtle redirects rule page: 

Internet searchers demonstrated to one kind of substance while clients are redirected to something fundamentally diverse 

Desktop clients get an ordinary page, while portable clients are redirected to a totally diverse spam space 

Google likewise overhauled the hacked destinations page with a substance about redirects that peruses: 

"Programmers may infuse vindictive code to your site that redirects a few clients to destructive or spammy pages. The sort of redirect now and again relies on upon referrer, client operator, or gadget. Case in point, clicking a URL in Google indexed lists could redirect you to a suspicious page, yet there is no redirect when you visit the same URL straightforwardly from a program." 

Google included a cautioning at the end of their blog entry saying that "with any violation of our quality rules, we may make manual move, including expulsion from our list, to keep up the nature of the indexed lists."


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