Web Site Cloaking and Search Engines

By Lee Underwood
Cloak: Something which hides, covers or keeps
something else secret. (Cambridge
Dictionary)
Cloaking: Also known as stealth, a technique used by
some Web sites to deliver one page to a search engine for indexing while
serving an entirely different page to everyone else. The search engine thinks
it is selecting a prime match to its request based on the meta tags that the
site administrator has input. However, the search result is misleading because
the meta tags do not correspond to what actually exists on the page. Some
search engines ... even ban cloaked Web sites. (Webopedia)
A good amount of web space has been dedicated to the merits of cloaking, but
no one seems able to agree on the actual definition of the technique. One
definition given is: "A technique used to deliver different web pages under
different circumstances." This definition is too broad as page redirects for
different browsers, for example, would be included under this definition but
these pages are not hidden from search engine robots.
The one main characteristic of cloaking, according to Webopedia and
Google, employs
a different page delivered to search engines than the one displayed to visitors
to the Web site; its only purpose being to hide content from search engines.
Many of those who employ cloaking techniques argue that they are presenting
something different to a search engine rather than hiding something from it. The
end result remains the same: the page presented to the search engine is
different than the one anticipated by the visitor.
Note: The cloaking argument gets more involved with the
addition of XML feeds. For a further discussion on the topic, see Danny
Sullivan's article,
"Ending The
Debate Over Cloaking."
Why Cloak?
The reasons for cloaking are generally twofold: to protect pages from other
search engine optimization (SEO) firms and to increase search engine ranking.
SEO firms spend a lot of time and money creating Web pages they hope will
rank high in search engine inquiries; they want to protect their methods from
other SEO companies. This makes it a ratings game, with higher search engine
rankings taking priority over content. In theory, this will increase the number
of visitors to the site, but increasing traffic doesn't necessarily result in an
increase in Web site income. If a visitor finds something different on the Web
page than that returned by the search engines, the chances are pretty good that
the visitor will leave and not return.
In order to create pages that rank high with search engines, it's usually
easier to concentrate on how it will "look" to the robot doing the indexing than
to a human visitor. For this to work, a different page is presented to the human
visitor.
Notice that in both of these scenarios the actual Web page ? the one visible
to a human visitor ? has been hidden from the search engine robot.
A Question of Integrity
Links make up the basic structure of the World Wide Web. While some links
provide false leads, the majority of them lead to the expected results. If the
integrity of the Web's link structure becomes questionable, then the entire
system has been compromised. It's similar to not knowing if the road you take
will actually lead you to the destination that appears on the map. While you
might tolerate that occasionally, you wouldn't want to second guess every road
you take.
Wide scale cloaking (as defined above) would soon render the search engine's
algorithm useless. Users would not know if the search results are accurate. If
the links supplied by search engines resulted in false leads and dead-ends, the
search engines would serve no purpose. Without search engines, how would you
find your way around the World Wide Web?
Conclusion
Should you cloak? That's a question each Web designer/owner has to answer for
themselves. If you have good content and concentrate on what your visitors want,
you should do just fine. It's similar to opening a business in the physical
world. There's no guarantee that you will succeed but if you have something
valuable to offer, that's a step in the right direction.
One other thing to keep in mind if you're considering cloaking: many of the
search engines will block your listing if they find out about it. Is it worth
taking the chance?
Note: Google
provides a listing from the Open Directory Project for Web sites that
provide information on cloaking techniques.
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