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how to remove 'Support Browser' in google SEO

         

lye85

1:46 pm on Oct 28, 2014 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



im, im new to google SEO, 'Support Browser' appears in front of my company name from (meta name='description')


any way to remove 'Support Browser' in title display in google search page?

phranque

7:49 pm on Oct 28, 2014 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



welcome to WebmasterWorld, lye85!

have you analyzed the anchor text of your inbound link profile?

lye85

3:22 pm on Nov 1, 2014 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



thanks for reply.

i found out that 2 html files in main hosting server, with name "about.html" & "index.html"

SEO get that <title> in "about.html" become search result in google search, instead of "index.html". finally i still want <title> in "index.html" become the blue font color search result.

i suspect that are 2 causes:

1. i suspect SEO get the <Title> by sequence of 'file name' order in hosting server.

2. "about.html" link contain in my page footer, my page footer appear all the time in my website. is it possible that SEO get the <Title> from most infrequence link in my website?

please correct what i miss understand, and thanks for any advices

lucy24

7:45 pm on Nov 1, 2014 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



#1 They have to be getting the "support browser" from something on your own site-- maybe CMS boilerplate in comment lines? --because I don't remember ever seeing it in search results. And if anyone else was seeing it they'd have said so by now. (Original question was asked several days ago.)

#2 A meta description is most likely to show up in search results when the search terms don't fit conveniently into a snippet. You're not allowed to name exact search terms in a WebmasterWorld post, but how many words were in the search?

#3 For several years google has been making up page titles when they don't like the existing one. But I don't remember reading about any case where they took the title of one page on the site and applied the whole thing to a different page.

#4 If a page title is used in links, then it's not only a page title. It's also anchor text for the linked page, and page text for any page where the link occurs. So the whole "title" issue may be a red herring.

#5 Alphabetical order of URLs shouldn't make any difference whatsoever. At all. Under any circumstances. Unless the search engine is indexing auto-generated index pages. These should not even exist-- especially not in directories that actually have an index page. By the usual yawn-provoking coincidence, it is not 24 hours since I figured out the exact chain of circumstances that could result in this happening.

lye85

1:20 pm on Nov 3, 2014 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



ucy thanks for your info
i added <meta name="robots" content="none" /> in my about.html to prevent SEO capture any content for the page. hope the solution works in my case..