The facts about Cloaking - www.SeoGoogleSite.com
The facts about Cloaking
Cloaking is the technique of returning different pages according to who or
what is requesting them. E.g. a surfer would receive the actual page whereas
a search engine spider would receive a different page, but would assume that
it is the actual page that surfers see.
The purposes of cloaking for search engine optimization are to hide highly
optimized pages from people, so that they can't be stolen, and to provide
search engine spiders with highly optimized pages that wouldn't look
particularly good in browsers.
There are three ways of cloaking. One is "IP delivery", where the IP
addresses of spiders are recognized at the server and handled accordingly;
another is "User-Agent delivery", where the spiders' User-Agents are
recognised, and the third is the first two combined.
Is cloaking ethical?
Let me put if this way. Search engines do it all the time. For instance,
Google delivers different pages according to where in the world the surfer
is located. People in the UK receive AdWord advertisements that are relative
to the UK, and people in the U.S. receive AdWords that are relative to the
U.S. Google delivers different pages according to the surfer's IP address.
That's IP delivery, and that's cloaking.
Also, from time to time, search engines prevent certain people from gaining
access to their .com versions. Instead, by checking the surfers' IP
addresses, they redirect people to their localized versions - even when the
surfers really do want to go to the .com version! Again, that's IP delivery,
and that's cloaking.
Because the search engines do it, it is clear that cloaking isn't
instrinsically unethical or wrong. If it's ok for the search engines to do
it, then it must be ok for everyone else to do it. So what is it about
cloaking that some people are dead against?
There is no sensible answer to that. The general idea is that serving people
one page and serving the search engines a different page is simply wrong,
because the engines are ranking the page according to what they believe it
to be and not according to what it actually is. That idea is purely a matter
of principle, and nothing at all to do with common sense.
The common sense view is that, if a page is ranked correctly, according to
its topic, then surfers will find it in the search results, click on it and
go to exactly where they expect to go to from reading the listing in the
search results. It doesn't matter how the page came to be ranked in that
position, and it doesn't matter if another page took its place when the
engine was evaluating it. As long as it is ranked correctly, according to
its topic, surfers are perfectly happy.
The fact that cloaking can be used to send people to sites and topics that
they did not expect to go to when clicking on a listing in the search
results, is an excellent reason to be against the misuse of cloaking, but it
is no reason at all to be against the cloaking technique in general.
An example of how cloaking can actually help Google
Google's crawlers won't spider pages that have anything that looks like
Session IDs in their URLs. If they did, they run the risk of spidering a
potentially infinite number of pages, because each page that is requested
would contain links to other pages, and the link URLs would contain the
current session ID, which makes them different URLs than the last time the
page was requested. And so it would go on and on and on, producing a vast
number of unique URLs to spider and index.
It means that Google won't spider most of the pages on some websites. But
Google actually wants to spider most or all of each website's pages. The
solution is to cloak the pages. By spotting page requests from the Google
spiders, and delivering modified pages without the normal Session IDs in the
link URLs, Google is able to spider all of a site's pages. This is precisely
what Google wants, it's what the website owner wants and, if asked, it would
be what sufers want. It helps everybody and harms no-one.
This example alone demonstrates that cloaking is not intrinsically wrong or
unethical. The technique can be used unethically, but it has various
perfectly ethical uses.
How is cloaking done?
A simple way of doing it on an Apache server is by using the .htaccess file
with the mod_rewrite module. With an .htaccess file in place, every file
request is subject to it.
The .htaccess file has many uses but, for cloaking purposes, it employs
Apache's mod_rewrite module to check for the search engine spiders' IP
addresses, User-Agents, or both. If a spider is detected, then mod_rewrite
is used to return a page that has been specially designed for spiders. If
the requester is not a spider, then the request goes through as normal and
the normal page is returned. Spiders are not aware of the switch. As far as
they are concerned, they are getting the page that they requested.
Cloaking Software
Fantomas is widely recognised as the best cloaking software around.
Information about it can be found here.