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So, if you want google to understand, you have to use something google knows, such as the HTTP protocol for example. i.e. place a 301 (moved permanently) redirectfomr default.asp to domain.com/
SN
Google doesn't even fetch them and any links to those URLs are credited to / instead. I think that index.cgi is in this category too.
index.shtml, iNdEx.HtmL, default.htm, default.asp, index.php, index.py are not merged and if Google doesn't find identical content they'll be listed separately, each with their own backlinks.
index.shtml, iNdEx.HtmL, default.htm, default.asp, index.php, index.py are not merged and if Google doesn't find identical content they'll be listed separately, each with their own backlinks.
why then when I search for link:www.domain.com and for link:www.domain.com/index.shtml I get absolutely the same backlinks dmoz and all external links included?
I posted with similar questions here
[webmasterworld.com...]
would really love to clear this up, earlier in some post Brett mentioned that many of those who lost their index-pages are dealing with duplicate content issue, hope somehow this but not some filters is the case with us, we do not have much to de-optimize anyway :(
The reasón was that all my "Home" links were pointing to [website.com...]
I changed it to [website.com...] and now [website.com...] has a PR 6
"I think that index.cgi is in this category too."
I don't think so. You can do a simple experiment. In my case I use default.asp.
If I check PR on [website.com...] I get 6. If I change what is after "/" I will in some cases get a PR indication even though there is no page. I get the following results which indicates that index.cgi is NOT considered the same page:
[website.com...] - PR 6
[website.com...] - PR 6 (That page is on the server)
[website.com...] - PR 6 (That page is NOT on the server)
[website.com...] - PR 6 (That page is NOT on the server)
[website.com...] - NO PR (That page is NOT on the server)
[website.com...] - NO PR (That page is NOT on the server)