Cloaking 202
Cloaking versus IP delivery
IP delivery can be considered a more benign variation of cloaking, where different content is served based upon the
requester's IP address. With cloaking, search engines and people never see the other's pages, whereas, with other uses
of IP delivery, both search engines and people can see the same pages. This technique is sometimes used by
graphics-heavy sites that have little textual content for spiders to analyze.
One use of IP delivery is to determine the requestor's location, and deliver content specifically written for that
country. This isn't necessarily cloaking. For instance, Google uses IP delivery for AdWords and AdSense advertising
programs to target users in different geographic locations.
IP delivery is a crude and unreliable method of determining the language in which to provide content. Many
countries and regions are multi-lingual, or the requestor may be a foreign national. A better method of content
negotiation is to examine the client's Accept-Language HTTP header.
As of 2006, many sites have taken up IP delivery to personalise content for their regular customers. Many of the top
1000 sites, including sites like Amazon (amazon.com), actively use IP delivery. None of these have been banned
from search engines as their intent is not deceptive.
Notes
[ 1 ]"Ask.com Editorial Guidelines" (http:/ / about. ask. com/ en/ docs/ about/ editorial_guidelines. shtml). About.ask.com.. Retrieved
2012-02-20.
[ 2 ]"Google's Guidelines on SEOs" (http:/ / http://www. google. com/ webmasters/ seo. html). Google.com. 2012-01-24.. Retrieved 2012-02-20.
[ 3 ]"Google's Guidelines on Site Design" (http:/ / http://www. google. com/ webmasters/ guidelines. html). Google.com.. Retrieved 2012-02-20.
[ 4 ]Yahoo! Search Content Quality Guidelines (http:/ / help. yahoo. com/ help/ us/ ysearch/ deletions/ deletions-05. html)
References
- Baoning Wu and Brian D. Davison: " Cloaking and Redirection: A Preliminary Study (http:/ / airweb. cse. lehigh.
edu/ 2005/ wu. pdf)". Workshop on Adversarial Information Retrieval on the Web, Chiba, Japan, 2005.