Duplicate content
Duplicate content is a term used in the field of search engine optimization to describe content that appears on more than one web page. The duplicate content can be substantial parts of the content within or across domains and can be either exactly duplicate or closely similar.[1] When multiple pages within a web site contain essentially the same content, search engines such as Google can penalise or cease displaying that site in any relevant search results.
Types
Non-malicious duplicate content may include variations of the same page, such as versions optimized for normal HTML, mobile devices, or printer-friendliness, or store items that can be shown via multiple distinct URLs.[2] Duplicate content issues can also arise when a site is accessible under multiple subdomains, such as with or without the "www." or where sites fail to handle the trailing slash of URLs correctly.[3]
Malicious duplicate content refers to content that is intentionally duplicated in an effort to manipulate search results and gain more traffic. This is known as search spam.
A 301 Moved Permanently a.k.a. a "301 redirect" is a method of dealing with duplicate content to redirect users and search engine crawlers to the single pertinent version of the content.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ "Duplicate content". Google. Retrieved 2012-07-24.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Duplicate content". Google. Retrieved 2008-12-29.
- ↑ "Duplicate content - Duplicate Content". Retrieved 2011-12-19.