4

It seems unnecessary for users outside of the site to be prompted to take the tour, and is wasting precious text preview real estate. It usually happens for me when I have "minute" or "minutes" in the search query.

eg. a front-page excerpt from a search for "stackoverflow objc check if date within last 30 minutes"

I imagine it'd be done with something like the googleoff/googleon tags.

Text between the tags is not indexed, is not associated with anchor text, or used for a snippet.

Update: Turns out that's just for Search Appliance. (Thanks @Pang)

Could we instead do something like this? https://webmasters.stackexchange.com/a/16391

Another solution is to wrap the sig in a span or div with style set to display:none and then use Javascript to take that away so the text displays for browsers with Javascript on. Search engines know it's not going to be displayed so shouldn't index it.

3
  • How are we supposed to influence Google results?
    – Ken White
    May 25, 2015 at 5:04
  • @KenWhite I've updated the question. It's up to each site to decide which parts it allows Google to index.
    – shellco
    May 25, 2015 at 5:11
  • 2
    @Sadurnias stackoverflow.com/a/19489890/1402846
    – Pang
    May 25, 2015 at 5:16

1 Answer 1

-5

I cannot see where a problem lies. All returned pages are relevant. They just cite the tour, and as the citation contains the word minutes, the sentence appears in the abstract.

I would never ask a SO developper to spend one minute on such a (IMHO non existent) problem.

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