Anonymous ID: 738f25 Dec. 29, 2022, 1:31 a.m. No.18034760   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4848 >>4878 >>4879 >>4883 >>4917 >>4918

>>18034718

>Someone out there cares so much that they’ve purged all Barsoomian { INFO / Family History > SPOOK ! }

>court documents for her Clinton representation in Hamburg vs. Clinton in 1998 and its appeal in 1999 from the DC District and Appeals court dockets.

 

>Someone out there cares so much that the internet has been purged of all information pertaining to Barsoomian.

 

>Historically this indicates that the individual is a protected CIA operative.

 

>Additionally, Lisa Barsoomian has specialized in opposing Freedom of Information Act requests on behalf of the intelligence community.

 

>Although Barsoomian has been involved in hundreds of cases representing the DC Office of the US Attorney, her email address is Lisa Barsoomian at NIH gov.

 

>The NIH stands for National Institutes of Health. >>18034435, >>18034445

 

>>18034457

>Follow the wives. >>18034581, >>18034654,

 

>>18034669

<>UK ANONS DIGG reQ_uest >>18034685

 

>>18034754

>Notable

 

>Lisa Barsoomian Digs and connections to the C_A and DeepState Cabal.

 

2nd NO_TABLEs AF UK ANONS DIGG ReQ_uest

Anonymous ID: 738f25 Dec. 29, 2022, 2:03 a.m. No.18034813   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4825 >>4883 >>4917 >>4918

>>18034308 _lb ALL

>>18034234

>>something to stop one from injecting javascript into your post.

>>18034251

>>18034295

>>18034302

>>makes sense

 

>>18034314

interdasting coincidence, still

>>implying

 

Bait n SWITCH via G00GleY:

{ excerpts }:

If you’re about to launch a new business website, you’ve probably asked yourself “how do I get my website to show up on Google search?”

After all, you can’t get on the first page if the search engine doesn’t even know your website exists.

 

Search engines like Google use simple programs called crawlers to literally read each page on your website line by line.

 

These crawlers aretasked with parsingand categorizing your site, information that is then sent to the search engine.

 

In order to invite crawlers to analyze your website,

(((you))) must add a small snippet of code or turn on the option that signals Google and asks the search engine to index your site.

 

It shouldn’t take very long for crawlers to index your site after this and voila!

https://www.fannit.com/seo/show-up-first-page-google-search/

 

SPIDERS /_\ robots.txt:

 

Robots.txt files are located in the root directory of websites (ex. yourdomain.com/robots.txt) and suggest which parts of your site search engines should and shouldn't crawl, as well as the speed at which they crawl your site, via specific robots.txt directives.

How Googlebot treats robots.txt files

 

If Googlebot can't find a robots.txt file for a site, it proceeds to crawl the site.

If Googlebot finds a robots.txt file for a site, it will usually abide by the suggestions and proceed to crawl the site.

If Googlebot encounters an error while trying to access a site’s robots.txt file and can't determine if one exists or not, it won't crawl the site.

 

Not all web robots follow robots.txt. People with bad intentions (e.g., e-mail address scrapers) build bots that don't follow this protocol. In fact, some bad actors use robots.txt files to find where you’ve located your private content. Although it might seem logical to block crawlers from private pages such as login and administration pages so that they don’t show up in the index, placing the location of those URLs in a publicly accessible robots.txt file also means that people with malicious intent can more easily find them. It’s better to NoIndex these pages and gate them behind a login form rather than place them in your robots.txt file.

 

You can read more details about this in the robots.txt portion of our Learning Center.

https://moz.com/beginners-guide-to-seo/how-search-engines-operate

 

  1. Using an X-Robots-Tag HTTP header

 

Alternatively, you can use an X-Robots-Tag, which you add to the HTTP response header of a given URL. It has basically the same effect as a “noindex” tag, but with the additional options to specify conditions for different search engines. For more information, please see Google’s guide here.

 

How to add an X-Robots-Tag:

 

Depending on the web browser you use, it can be pretty tricky to find and edit the HTTP response header. For Google Chrome, you can use developer tools like ModHeader or Modify Header Value. Here are examples of X-Robots-Tag for specific functions:

 

To de-index a web page:

 

X-Robots-Tag: noindex

 

To set different de-indexing rules for different search engines:

 

X-Robots-Tag: googlebot: nofollow

 

X-Robots-Tag: otherbot: noindex, nofollow

  1. Using a robots.txt file

 

A robots.txt file is mainly used to manage search engine crawler traffic from overloading your website with requests. It must be noted, however, that this type of file is not meant to hide web pages from Google; rather, it is used to prevent images, videos, and other media files from appearing in search results.

 

How to use robots.txt file to hide media files from Google:

 

Using robots.txt is fairly technical. Basically, you need to use a text editor to create a standard ASCII or UTF-8 text file, and then add that file to the root folder of your website. To learn more on how to create a robots.txt file, check out Google’s guide here. Google has also created separate guides for hiding certain media files from appearing in search results:

 

Hiding images with robots.txt file

Hiding videos with robots.txt file

 

https://www.ilfusion.com/how-to-prevent-google-from-indexing-certain-web-pages