Captcha wall to access content and cloaking sanction
-
Hello, to protect our website against scrapping, visitor are redirect to a recaptcha page after 2 pages visited.
But for a SEO purpose Google bot is not included in that restriction so it could be seen as cloaking.
What is the best practice in SEO to avoid a penalty for cloaking in that case ?
I think about adding a paywall Json shema NewsArticle but the content is acceccible for free so it's not a paywall but more a captcha protection wall.What do you recommend ?
Thanks,Describe your question in detail. The more information you give, the better! It helps give context for a great answer.
-
In general, Google cares only about cloaking in the sense of treating their crawler differently to human visitors - it's not a problem to treat them differently to other crawlers.
So: if you are tracking the "2 pages visited" using cookies (which I assume you must be? there is no other reliable way to know the 2nd request is from the same user without cookies?) then you can treat googlebot exactly the same as human users - every request is stateless (without cookies) and so googlebot will be able to crawl. You can then treat non-googlebot scrapers more strictly, and rate limit / throttle / deny them as you wish.
I think that if real human users get at least one "free" visit, then you are probably OK - but you may want to consider not showing the recaptcha to real human users coming from google (but you could find yourself in an arms race with the scrapers pretending to be human visitors from google).
In general, I would expect that if it's a recaptcha ("prove you are human") step rather than a paywall / registration wall, you will likely be OK in the situation where:
- Googlebot is never shown the recaptcha
- Other scrapers are aggressively blocked
- Human visitors get at least one page without a recaptcha wall
- Human visitors can visit more pages after completing a recaptcha (but without paying / registering)
Hope that all helps. Good luck!
-
Well I'm not saying that there's no risk in what you are doing, just that I perceive the risk to be less risky than the alternatives. I think such a fundamental change like pay-walling could be moderately to highly likely to have a high impact on results (maybe a 65% likelihood of a 50% impact). Being incorrectly accused of cloaking would be a much lower chance (IMO) but with potentially higher impact (maybe a 5% or less chance of an 85% impact). When weighing these two things up, I subjectively conclude that I'd rather make the cloaking less 'cloaky' in and way I could, and leave everything outside of a paywall. That's how I'd personally weigh it up
Personally I'd treat Google as a paid user. If you DID have a 'full' paywall, this would be really sketchy but since it's only partial and indeed data can continue to be accessed for FREE via recaptcha entry, that's the one I'd go for
Again I'm not saying there is no risk, just that each set of dice you have at your disposal are ... not great? And this is the set of dice I'd personally choose to roll with
The only thing to keep in mind is that, the algorithms which Googlebot return data to are pretty smart. But they're not human smart, a quirk in an algo could cause a big problem. Really though, the chances of that IMO (if all you have said is accurate) are minimal. It's the lesser of two evils from my current perspective
-
Yes our DA is good and we got lot of gouv, edu and medias backlinks.
Paid user did not go through recaptcha, indeed treat Google as a paid user could be a good solution.
So you did not recommend using a paywall ?
Today recaptcha is only used for decision pages
But we need thoses pages to be indexed for our business because all or our paid user find us while searching a justice decision on Google.So we have 2 solutions :
- Change nothing and treat Google as a paid user
- Use hard paywall and inform Google that we use json shema markup but we risk to seen lot of page deindexed
In addition we could go from 2 pages visited then captcha to something less intrusive like 6 pages then captcha
Also in the captcha page there is also a form to start a free trial, so visitor can check captcha and keep navigate or create a free account and get an unlimited access for 7 days.To conclude, if I well understand your opinion, we don't have to stress about being penalized for cloaking because Gbot is smart and understand why we use captcha and our DA help us being trustable by gbot. So I think the best solution is the 1, Change nothing and treat Google as a paid user.
Thank a lot for your time and your help !
It's a complicated subject and it's hard to find people able to answer my question, but you did it -
Well if you have a partnership with the Court of Justice I'd assume your trust and authority metrics would be pretty high with them linking to you on occasion. If that is true then I think in this instance Google would give you the benefit of the doubt, as you're not just some random tech start-up (maybe a start-up, but one which matters and is trusted)
It makes sense that in your scenario your data protection has to be iron-clad. Do paid users have to go through the recaptcha? If they don't, would there be a way to treat Google as a paid user rather than a free user?
Yeah putting down a hard paywall could have significant consequences for you. Some huge publishers manage to still get indexed (pay-walled news sites), but not many and their performance deteriorates over time IMO
Here's a question for you. So you have some pages you really want indexed, and you have a load of data you don't want scraped or taken / stolen - right? Is it possible to ONLY apply the recaptcha for the pages which contain the data that you don't want stolen, and never trigger the recaptcha (at all) in other areas? Just trying to think if there is a wiggle way in the middle, to make it obvious to Google you are doing all you possibly can to do keep Google's view and the user view the same
-
Hi effectdigital, thanks a lot for that answer. I agreed with you captcha is not the best UX idea but our content is sensitive, we are a legal tech indexing french justice decision. We get unique partnership with Court of Justice because we got a unique technology to anonymize data in justice decision so we don't want our competitor to scrap our date (and trust me they try, every day..). This is why we use recaptcha protection. For Gbot we use Google reverse DNS and user agent so even a great scrapper can't bypass our security.
Then we have a paid option, people can create an account and paid a monthly subscription to access content in unlimited. This is why I think about paywall. We could replace captcha page by a paywall page (with a freetrial of course) but I'm not sur Google will index millions of page hiding behing a metered paywall
As you said, I think there is no good answer..
And again, thank a lot to having take time to answer my question -
Unless you have previously experienced heavy scraping which you cannot solve any other way, this seems a little excessive. Most websites don't have such strong anti-spam measures and they cope just fine without them
I would say that it would be better to embed the recaptcha on the page and just block users from proceeding further (or accessing the content), until the recaptcha were filled. Unfortunately this would be a bad solution as scrapers would still be able to scrape the page, so I guess redirecting to the captcha is your only option. Remember that if you are letting Googlebot through (probably with a user agent toggle) then as long as scrape-builders program their scripts to serve the Googlebot UA, they can penetrate your recaptcha redirects and just refuse to do them. Even users can alter their browser's UA to avoid the redirects
There are a number of situations where Google don't consider redirect penetration to be cloaking. One big one is regional redirects, as Google needs to crawl a whole multilingual site instead of being redirected. I would think that in this situation Google wouldn't take too much of an issue with what you are doing, but you can never be certain (algorithms work in weird and wonderful ways)
I don't think any schema can really help you. Google will want to know that you are using technology that could annoy users so they can lower your UX score(s) accordingly, but unfortunately letting them see this will stop your site being properly crawled so I don't know what the right answer is. Surely there must be some less nuclear, obstructive technology you could integrate instead? Or just keep on top of your block lists (IP ranges, user agents) and monitor your site (don't make users suffer)
If you are already letting Googlebot through your redirects, why not just have a user-agent based allow list instead of a black list which is harder to manage? Find the UAs of most common mobile / desktop browsers (Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge, Opera, whatever) and allow those UAs plus Googlebot. Anyone who does penetrate for scraping, deal with them on a case-by-case basis
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Defining duplicate content
If you have the same sentences or paragraphs on multiple pages of your website, is this considered duplicate content and will it hurt SEO?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | mnapier120 -
User generated content (Comments) - What impact do they have?
Hello MOZ stars! I have a question regarding user comments on article pages. I know that user generated content is good for SEO, but how much impact does it really have? For your information:
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | idg-sweden
1 - All comments appears in source code and is crawled by spiders.
2 - A visitor can comment a page for up to 60 days.
3 - The amount of comments depends on the topic, we usually gets between 3-40 comments. My question:
1 - If we were to remove comments completely, what impact would it have from seo perspective? (I know you cant be certain - but please make an educated guess if possible)
2 - If it has a negative and-/or positive impact please specify why! 🙂 If anything is unclear or you want certain information don't hesitate to ask and I'll try to specify. Best regards,
Danne0 -
An Unfair Content related penalty :(
Hi Guys, Google.com.au
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | jarrodb
website: http://partysuppliesnow.com.au/ We had a massive drop in search queries in WMT around the 11th of september this year, I investigated and it seemed as though there were no updates around this time. Our site is only receiving branded search now - and after investigating i am led to believe that Google has mistakingly affected our website in the panda algorithm. There are no manual penalties applies on this site as confirmed by WMT. Our product descriptions are pretty much all unique but i have noticed that when typing a portion of text from these pages into google search using quotation marks, shopping affiliate sites which we use are being displayed first and our page no where to be seen or last in the results. This leads me to believe that Google thinks we have scraped the content from these sites when in actual fact they have from us. We also have G+ authorship setup. Typing a products full name into Google (tried a handful) our site is not in the top 100 or 200 at times, i think this further clarifies that we are penalised. We would really appreciate some opinions on this. Any course of actions would be great. We don't particularly want to invest in writing content again. From our point of view it looks like Google is stopping our site from ranking because it's getting mixed up with who the originator for our content is. Thanks and really appreciate it.0 -
What this site is doing? Does it look like cloaking to you?
Hi here, I was studying our competitors SEO strategies, and I have noticed that one of our major competitors has setup something pretty weird from a SEO stand point for which I would like to know your thoughts about because I can't find a clear explanation for it. Here is the deal: the site is musicnotes.com, and their product pages are located inside the /sheetmusic/ directory, so if you want to see all their product pages indexed on Google, you can just type in Google: site:musicnotes.com inurl:/sheetmusic/ Then you will get about 290,000 indexed pages. No, here is the tricky part: try to click on one of those links, then you will get a 302 redirect to a page that includes a meta "noindex, nofollow" directive. Isn't that pretty weird? Why would they want to "nonidex, nofollow" a page from a 302 redirect? And how in the heck the redirecting page is still in the index?!! And how Google can allow that?! All this sounds weird to me and remind me spammy techniques of the 90s called "cloaking"... what do you think?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | fablau0 -
Changing content in a well established page.
I have a question i rank well for O'fallon lawn care and I dont rank well for O'Fallon, MO lawn care. Is it ok to go in that page and add some content optimizing it around O'Fallon, MO Lawn care or is that a bad idea. Appreciate any feed back thanks everyone.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | gslc0 -
Question about copying content
Hi there, I have had a question from a retailer asking if they can take all our content i.e. blog articles, product pages etc, what is best practice here in getting SEO value out of this? Here a few ideas I was thinking of: I was thinking they put canonical tags on all pages where they have copied our content? They copy the content but leave all anchor text in place? Please let me know your thoughts. Kind Regards
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Paul780 -
Diagnosing duplicate content issues
We recently made some updates to our site, one of which involved launching a bunch of new pages. Shortly afterwards we saw a significant drop in organic traffic. Some of the new pages list similar content as previously existed on our site, but in different orders. So our question is, what's the best way to diagnose whether this was the cause of our ranking drop? My current thought is to block the new directories via robots.txt for a couple days and see if traffic improves. Is this a good approach? Any other suggestions?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | jamesti0 -
How to seo : two domain having exactly the same content
Target website in question is ikt.co.id,it is hosted in our server located in US, what I am going to do right now is create a new subdomain id.ikt.co.id that served EXACTLY the same content but it is hosted in our Indonesia server. Whenever people go to any page within ikt.co.id, it will detect their country, if they are from Indonesia, I will redirect them to our Indonesia server. Okay, from SEO point of view I know there are couple problems such as Content duplication, and perhaps there are more. I think to handle the content duplication I can cannonical all URL on id.ikt.co.id to the ikt.co.id version instead. The same thing for social sharing, all links shared will be the one from ikt.co.id, so all of those link juices go to ikt.co.id, and for good measure I can also set the robots.txt to tell them not to index id.ikt.co.id ... All sounded good to me, until the I became paranoid and start thinking "have I missed anything that might hurt my SERP" ? here is the question, did i miss something important, if i did could you please tell me what it is and if possible brought the solution you think might work into this discussion?? Again thanks a lot for your help 😃
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | IKT0