What's the best practice for implementing a "content disclaimer" that doesn't block search robots?
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Our client needs a content disclaimer on their site. This is a simple "If you agree to these rules then click YES if not click NO" and you're pushed back to the home page.
I have this gut feeling that this may cause an upset with the search robots.
Any advice?
R/
John
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Hi John. I've seen some websites that use a simple box that is "lightboxed" on top of the content. When you click Yes, the lightbox appears and the content is shown as normal. To a search engine, this would look like a perfectly normal website.
However, if your "click yes or click no" refers the end-user to another page ONLY AFTER they click yes, then this would be a huge issue with search engines.
I'd recommend using the "User Agent Switcher" in Firefox to view your site as a Googlebot. This should tell you whether or not it's seeing the entire site or just a portion of your site:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/user-agent-switcher/
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