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However, I'm observing that sites in the top positions for highly competitive terms arn't using the noarchive tag and therefor suspect that google is in some way penalising sites using noarchive.
I assume that some of the sites I'm looking at are cloaking but the cache appears to match the non-cached page and so I'm a bit confused as to how they're achiving this.
The only solution to not using the noarchive tag that I can think of it to use a javascript redirect but somebody looking for a cloaked page could clearly see what was going on.
Does anybody have any thoughts about my observation and suggest any alternatives?
Thanks.
I seem to remember reading that most sites in the top positions for competitive terms are there through cloaking. Maybe they have lots of cloaked domains that they point to their non cloaked domain so as to focus pr?
If I were to decide not to use noarchive tag what other techniques could I use to prevent users from viewing the cache of my page? Or am I stuck with it?
I've also seen people using a JavaScript/CSS combination to present a copy of their human version of the page in a <div> over the top of the optimized version. Of course, this doesn't really protect the source code, but it goes a long way in making somebody think the cached page is the same as the page in the SERP.