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How Smart is Googlebot

What else can the bot find out?

         

Lester

11:21 pm on Jan 31, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Does any one know if Googlebot can query a database and get information on the domain owner's name (not IP address but a person's name like Mary Smith) and compare that name with other sites it is crawling?

Shakil

11:25 pm on Jan 31, 2003 (gmt 0)



lester,

welcome to webmasterworld.

Google can do that, and some....... :)

whether it DOES it is a different issue.

Shak

andreasfriedrich

11:27 pm on Jan 31, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Welcome to WebmasterWorld [webmasterworld.com] Lester.

Be sure to read Marcia`s WebmasterWorld Welcome and Guide to the Basics [webmasterworld.com] post.

Of course the robot could do a whois lookup for all the domains it crawls. Itīs just a question of whether that is a sensible use of resources. Additionally not all NICs allow the use of the whois data for commercial purposes. So I guess that whois queries will be done only when a site is reviewed manually.

Andreas

<added>despite my use of text templates I was too slow ;)</added>

jdMorgan

11:37 pm on Jan 31, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Lester,

Welcome to WebmasterWorld [webmasterworld.com]!

Just in case you're thinking of trying something "tricky"...

Does any one know if Googlebot can query a database and get information on the domain owner's name (not IP address but a person's name like Mary Smith) and compare that name with other sites it is crawling?

I doubt it, but your competition certainly can. Then, a quick trip to Google's spam-reporting page is all it takes, and your site is gone.

I suspect most of the permanent bans for excessive cross-linking, hidden text, and the like are done this way. If Google does manage to automate the process, it will just happen sooner.

Sites which hit number one using these techniques don't last long; As soon as number two spots anything untoward in number one's site and reports it, he's number one... A lot of motivation there, see? The higher you are in the SERPs, the cleaner you'd better be.

If you are thinking of trying something that violates or even skirts Google's rules, don't. Well, don't until you have a pool of great domain names, some of which you can afford to lose, and a staff of sharp researchers to stay on top of Google's latest policies, IP adddresses, spidering schedules, etc. :)

HTH,
Jim

Lester

11:42 pm on Jan 31, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks for your insight! I suppose it would be a waste of resources for Googlebot to do in depth data analysis like that, but then it got me thinking.

Lester

11:44 pm on Jan 31, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree JD. I have already found out the hard way what not to do in that respect. Fortunately It isn't the end of the world!;)