Post by account_disabled on Dec 3, 2023 21:23:38 GMT 10
You will often find no two different web pages the same. Content is indexed in Bing's search results. Microsoft's search engine uses an algorithm that automatically filters out web pages with duplicate content. If three pages have the same content, Bing tries to identify the page that published the content first and includes that page in the search results. The other two pages are automatically filtered from Bing's index because they contain duplicate content. This is done to ensure that Bing users see unique pages listed in search results. Duplicate content can occur in a variety of scenarios and may cause some or all of your site's pages to be filtered from Bing's search results.
For example, if you are rebranding your website under a new domain but the content is in your old domain, Bing will display your new domain as duplicate content. There is also a possibility that another website has copied your content. Bing is pretty good at determining which web page published a Email Data piece of content first. But if another website uses scraping software to automatically copy and publish content from your site, it can trick Bing into thinking it's the first. Here's what you should do: Report copyright infringement to Bing using the portal at Bing.com/Webmaster/Tools/ContentRemovalForm. Bing Penalized for Violating Guidelines If your website violates Bing's guidelines, Bing may penalize it by removing it from its index. Index penalties like this are often associated with malware distribution or malicious SEO practices.
For example, using link farms to provide link juice to your website is criminal. If your website has been hacked and is now distributing malware to visitors, Bing may also remove it from the index. If you think Bing has penalized your website, contact them directly by clicking the "Support" tab at the bottom of Bing Webmaster Tools. Click the drop-down menu for the domain relevant to your issue and select "Index: My site is not in the index." Once we receive your application email, Bing will investigate your website to determine why it is not appearing in search results. When your website does not appear in Bing's index, you may think that pursuing an SEO strategy on the Microsoft search engine is a waste of time. Regardless of why Bing isn't indexing your website, there is almost always a solution.
For example, if you are rebranding your website under a new domain but the content is in your old domain, Bing will display your new domain as duplicate content. There is also a possibility that another website has copied your content. Bing is pretty good at determining which web page published a Email Data piece of content first. But if another website uses scraping software to automatically copy and publish content from your site, it can trick Bing into thinking it's the first. Here's what you should do: Report copyright infringement to Bing using the portal at Bing.com/Webmaster/Tools/ContentRemovalForm. Bing Penalized for Violating Guidelines If your website violates Bing's guidelines, Bing may penalize it by removing it from its index. Index penalties like this are often associated with malware distribution or malicious SEO practices.
For example, using link farms to provide link juice to your website is criminal. If your website has been hacked and is now distributing malware to visitors, Bing may also remove it from the index. If you think Bing has penalized your website, contact them directly by clicking the "Support" tab at the bottom of Bing Webmaster Tools. Click the drop-down menu for the domain relevant to your issue and select "Index: My site is not in the index." Once we receive your application email, Bing will investigate your website to determine why it is not appearing in search results. When your website does not appear in Bing's index, you may think that pursuing an SEO strategy on the Microsoft search engine is a waste of time. Regardless of why Bing isn't indexing your website, there is almost always a solution.