Google's John Mueller Real Estate Photo Editing

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naim@
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Google's John Mueller Real Estate Photo Editing

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During a Webmaster Central Hangout, Google's John Mueller explained why Real Estate Photo Editing Google crawls nonexistent pages and what that means for your crawl budget. Web publishers would like to see Google crawl existing pages. It seems like a waste of time for Google to crawl pages that don't exist. A web publisher asked if he should stop Googlebot from crawling nonexistent pages. John Mueller's answer adds more information to what we know about Google's 404 scans. Non-existent pages are called 404 pages. It is the server error code that a website should give when a requested web page is missing. A 404 error code means that the server could not Real Estate Photo Editing locate a requested web page and it is missing.

A 410 error code indicates that a web page has gone on purpose and Real Estate Photo Editing will never return. Google's John Mueller explains why Google crawls non-existent pages When Google crawls a nonexistent page (a 404 page), it can be called a 404 crawl. Google's John Mueller made three interesting statements about why Google crawls nonexistent pages: Advertising Continue reading below 404 crawls are sometimes Google using extra crawl capacity to check URLs that existed before (in case the page comes back) 404 crawl is a sign that Google has more than enough capacity to crawl more URLs on your site It is not necessary to block the crawling of 404 pages Real Estate Photo Editing (in order to preserve the crawling budget). You will not lose scan capacity from 404 scans Google remembers 404 pages Although Google doesn't keep a web page in its index, if the page existed before, Google will remember that a web page existed before at that URL and crawl that old URL to see if it returned.

Google's Matt Cutts said in 2014 that the reason Google remembers is Real Estate Photo Editing to build in a backup in case a web publisher makes a mistake by deleting a webpage and the webpage is returned. Here's how Google handled 404 error pages according to Matt Cutts in 2014: “200 could mean everything went really well. 404 means the page was not found. 410 usually means gone, because in the page is not found and we don't expect it to come back. So 410 has a bit more of a connotation that this page is Real Estate Photo Editing definitely gone. So the short answer is that sometimes we treat 404s and 410s a little differently, but for the most part you shouldn't care.
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