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Page Cloaking -
To Cloak or Not to Cloak
By Sumantra Roy
Page cloaking can
broadly be defined as a technique used to deliver different web pages
under different circumstances. There are two primary reasons that people
use page cloaking:
i) It allows them to
create a separate optimized page for each search engine and another page
which is aesthetically pleasing and designed for their human visitors.
When a search engine spider visits a site, the page which has been
optimized for that search engine is delivered to it. When a human visits a
site, the page which was designed for the human visitors is shown. The
primary benefit of doing this is that the human visitors don't need to be
shown the pages which have been optimized for the search engines, because
the pages which are meant for the search engines may not be aesthetically
pleasing, and may contain an over-repetition of keywords.
ii) It allows them to
hide the source code of the optimized pages that they have created, and
hence prevents their competitors from being able to copy the source code.
Page cloaking is
implemented by using some specialized cloaking scripts. A cloaking script
is installed on the server, which detects whether it is a search engine or
a human being that is requesting a page. If a search engine is requesting
a page, the cloaking script delivers the page which has been optimized for
that search engine. If a human being is requesting the page, the cloaking
script delivers the page which has been designed for humans.
There are two primary
ways by which the cloaking script can detect whether a search engine or a
human being is visiting a site:
i) The first and
simplest way is by checking the User-Agent variable. Each time anyone (be
it a search engine spider or a browser being operated by a human) requests
a page from a site, it reports an User-Agent name to the site. Generally,
if a search engine spider requests a page, the User-Agent variable
contains the name of the search engine. Hence, if the cloaking script
detects that the User-Agent variable contains a name of a search engine,
it delivers the page which has been optimized for that search engine. If
the cloaking script does not detect the name of a search engine in the
User-Agent variable, it assumes that the request has been made by a human
being and delivers the page which was designed for human beings.
However, while this is
the simplest way to implement a cloaking script, it is also the least
safe. It is pretty easy to fake the User-Agent variable, and hence,
someone who wants to see the optimized pages that are being delivered to
different search engines can easily do so.
ii) The second and more
complicated way is to use I.P. (Internet Protocol) based cloaking. This
involves the use of an I.P. database which contains a list of the I.P.
addresses of all known search engine spiders. When a visitor (a search
engine or a human) requests a page, the cloaking script checks the I.P.
address of the visitor. If the I.P. address is present in the I.P.
database, the cloaking script knows that the visitor is a search engine
and delivers the page optimized for that search engine. If the I.P.
address is not present in the I.P. database, the cloaking script assumes
that a human has requested the page, and delivers the page which is meant
for human visitors.
Although more
complicated than User-Agent based cloaking, I.P. based cloaking is more
reliable and safe because it is very difficult to fake I.P. addresses.
Now that you have an
idea of what cloaking is all about and how it is implemented, the question
arises as to whether you should use page cloaking. The one word answer is
"NO". The reason is simple: the search engines don't like it, and will
probably ban your site from their index if they find out that your site
uses cloaking. The reason that the search engines don't like page cloaking
is that it prevents them from being able to spider the same page that
their visitors are going to see. And if the search engines are prevented
from doing so, they cannot be confident of delivering relevant results to
their users. In the past, many people have created optimized pages for
some highly popular keywords and then used page cloaking to take people to
their real sites which had nothing to do with those keywords. If the
search engines allowed this to happen, they would suffer because their
users would abandon them and go to another search engine which produced
more relevant results.
Of course, a question
arises as to how a search engine can detect whether or not a site uses
page cloaking. There are three ways by which it can do so:
i) If the site uses
User-Agent cloaking, the search engines can simply send a spider to a site
which does not report the name of the search engine in the User-Agent
variable. If the search engine sees that the page delivered to this spider
is different from the page which is delivered to a spider which reports
the name of the search engine in the User-Agent variable, it knows that
the site has used page cloaking.
ii) If the site uses
I.P. based cloaking, the search engines can send a spider from a different
I.P. address than any I.P. address which it has used previously. Since
this is a new I.P. address, the I.P. database that is used for cloaking
will not contain this address. If the search engine detects that the page
delivered to the spider with the new I.P. address is different from the
page that is delivered to a spider with a known I.P. address, it knows
that the site has used page cloaking.
iii) A human
representative from a search engine may visit a site to see whether it
uses cloaking. If she sees that the page which is delivered to her is
different from the one being delivered to the search engine spider, she
knows that the site uses cloaking.
Hence, when it comes to
page cloaking, my advice is simple: don't even think about using it.
Article by
Sumantra Roy. Sumantra is one of the most respected and recognized search
engine positioning specialists on the Internet. For more articles on
search engine placement, subscribe to his 1st Search Ranking Newsletter by
sending a blank email to
mailto:1stSearchRanking.999.99@optinpro.com
or by going to
http://www.1stSearchRanking.com
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