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I have a commercial web site that has a Google PR of 5. It ranks highly on Google for many major keywords that pertain to my site. It had maintained its highly ranked position for over 4 months until this week when Google updated.
Now my site is nowhere to be found for any keywords. The only way of finding my site is by searching for it by domain name. The strange thing is, when I do find my site, Google has added a strange extension to my URL. For example, instead of Google showing www.mysite.com, it now says, www.mysite.com/?Example+Foo
I have no idea what or where the (?Example+Foo) part has come from. It’s not on my index page or in any of the affiliate linking code on my index page.
Again, if I search for my site by domain name on Google it shows my site with this strange URL and a PR of 0. However, if I type my URL straight into my browser, the Google tool bar still give my site a PR 5. Can anyone shed any light on what’s going wrong?
Many thanks.
Added: And welcome to Webmasterworld... :-)
As I have nearly 1000 reciprocal link exchanges with other sites I can see the possibility of a site linking to mine and innocuously causing the problem. However, it also seems possible and open for abuse. All it would take then is for an unscrupulous competitor to deliberately sabotage my site by duplicating my page content.
Do you think it is advisably or even worth while emailing Google to see if they would re-index my URL?
In my case, the index.htm on www.mysite.org showed on a search of the "title" of my page as www.mysite.org/?example_foo. If you clicked on that URL, it would take you to my site, but with the dodgy URL in the address bar. For whatever reason that the linking site had done that, (others here would know... it might be for tracking), the Google crawl of their page saw it as pointing to a duplicate of my index, even though it actually went to my index, on my site.
In my case, it was easy to find who was causing the problem because the offending site was shown in the dodgy URL "www.mysite.org/?examplefoo.com". It took several emails to the examplefoo site to finally get it changed, and then Google straightened things out after everything had been recrawled. It took Inktomi about 5 months to correct it... (it had also happened in Ink).
Added: And yes, it sure struck me as something open to abuse by rival sites, if you had such, which I fortunately don't. I couldn't believe the problems it caused me.
Well, I have to admit, that also includes me. I would have mentioned it in my previous post had I thought it relevant.
Going through every one of my reciprocal links is like looking for a needle in a hay stack.
One would think that the technology Google uses, or the spidering it employees, could identify issues such as this and avert such problems.
Thanks everyone for your advice
Added: (I always seem to have to add something...) Killroy's suggestion is very good. You can also have problems if someone links to you with "site.org" rather than "www.site.org". I'm sure there are a few other variations that can mess things up.