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When a spider visits the site and follows a link, an alternative, static, version of the page is returned. On this page the meta tags, title and URL are all modified to be more SE friendly.
They also tell me a number of big companies are doing this already and have not been penalised. Does this sound like it would genuinely be accepted by Google, or is it only a matter of time until they clamp down on it?
I avoid sending meta tags to non-spider visitors since it simply wastes bandwidth and time (users don't read meta tags; spiders sometimes do).
No attempt is being made to deceive anyone, so no one should mind.
I also use slightly less CPU-expensive stuff on pages when I think the visitor is a spider since it can save me 0.25s of CPU time building the page and the difference is marginal (actually, I also give the spider a very slightly more focussed set of links off the page to related items in the site as a result).
Again, no attempt to deceive nor material change, so no one should mind. And I really don't mind if normal humans see the "spider" version of a page; it's totally usable and presentable.
Rgds
Damon
No, I don't like Flash; I'm not a fan of Flash at all.
My site guidelines aim for most pages to be under 32kBytes, *including* all embedded content such as inline images.
Thus, saving a few percent of metatags helps with bandwidth (more so in the past when it was much more expensive for me).
But much more importantly it significantly reduces the time before the first viewable and renderable content reaches the viewer's browser: one or two TCP segments at least which may *double* the perceived performance on a slow or congested link. So the user sees something sooner AND the browser can start fetching embedded images sooner.
So the motivating factor is as much UI experience and interactivity as bandwidth.
I learnt all this the hard way many many years ago when I got into Mirskey's "Worst of the Web" and my 14400bps analogue leased line was maxed out for a whole week! B^>
Rgds
Damon
PS. I had a quick sanity check regarding earlier posts in the thread, and almost all the search engines I care about, esp G, do have no "referrer" so I will stick with this very quick check for the moment.