Settings

Theme

Kogan.com mysteriously disappears from Microsoft Search Engines

kogan.com

105 points by _Mark 14 years ago · 50 comments

Reader

blauwbilgorgel 14 years ago

They serve their robots.txt as a "application/octet-stream" not "text/plain". Might be confusing some search engines?

Also according to Internet Archive their robots.txt has changed in the last months.

This was a version that was archived:

http://web.archive.org/web/20080104044407/http://www.kogan.c...

At a glance, they are whitelisting some bots, including Googlebot, but not including Bingbot, and disallowing the rest.

  User-agent: Googlebot
  Disallow: 

  User-agent: *
  Disallow: /
Another marketing stunt?
  • UnoriginalGuy 14 years ago

    Your link is pointing at 2008. That is four years ago. Hardly proof of anything.

    You are right about the content type however.

    • blauwbilgorgel 14 years ago

      Correct. It doesn't proof much, but that they previously had a buggy robots.txt.

      Usually these posts are accompanied by a declining traffic graph for Bing referrers. That would give us more proof and a timeframe to work with.

      The post gives two options for their absence in Bing results: a fault at Microsoft or as a punishment. With their history I think a fault on their own part is a more likely option. I can't rule that out.

      • Yver 14 years ago

        You are arguing in bad faith. The robots.txt from 2008 is a whitelist of 190+ known crawlers. It doesn't include Bing, which was launched in 2009.

        In 2008, kogan.com was a parked domain. It has nothing to do with the current owner(s).

        • blauwbilgorgel 14 years ago

          The choice for linking to a 2008 file was not the best. At least their current robots.txt is buggy too, so it isn't all that relevant for proving a track record.

          I thought kogan.com was around in 2008 as the blog goes back to 2008.

          The robots.txt is whitelisting bots with agents like "No" and "Due to a deficiency in Java it's not currently possible to set the User-agent." but then blocks all other known crawlers (like MSNbot and Yahoo Slurp).

          I was not trying to be deceitful. IMO: Deceitful is a PR stunt arguing it is the fault or an evil plan of Microsoft, when you don't present anything to substantiate your claim, and it is a fact the webmaster is at fault in the vast majority of these cases.

citricsquid 14 years ago

Microsoft themselves want their users to upgrade to latest browsers (see: http://www.ie6countdown.com/) so the idea that they would take issue with someone else doing this (so much so that they'd remove them from bing) seems a bit.. unlikely.

chrislomax 14 years ago

Anyone else thinking they added a robots.txt entry for bing to disallow, waited to get de-listed then removed the offending robots.txt entry, posted this news article knowing bing would pick them back up in a couple of days?

  • michaelt 14 years ago

    The HTTP last modified header for www.kogan.com/robots.txt has Last-Modified: Wed, 06 Jun 2012 06:14:35 GMT

    It's possible they did this and they were cunning enough to turn back the last-modified clock.

    • reinhardt 14 years ago

      How did you get that? Curl says May 4 instead:

        $ curl -I http://www.kogan.com/robots.txt
        HTTP/1.1 200 OK
        Server: nginx/1.0.14
        Date: Mon, 09 Jul 2012 18:48:34 GMT
        Content-Type: application/octet-stream
        Content-Length: 79
        Last-Modified: Fri, 04 May 2012 18:58:02 GMT
        Connection: keep-alive
        Accept-Ranges: bytes
  • jbigelow76 14 years ago

    If that's what they did (no telling really) that would be pretty clever PR wise.

AshleysBrain 14 years ago

I think this is just some random technical glitch that has de-ranked them for some reason at an awkward time, along the lines of Google accidentally marking a legit website as spammy, sending it way down the results. Can it really be proved that this was done directly in response to the IE7 tax? What would the point be anyway? Maybe the storm of incoming links about the IE7 news accidentally got identified as linkfarming somehow?

ot 14 years ago

"we noticed that the www.kogan.com website stopped appearing in organic search results on Microsoft backed search engines"

They don't say explicitly, let alone prove, that the result ever appeared on Bing, while "stopped" would imply that.

If the comments about the wrong robots.txt got it right, it is well possible that the website was never indexed by Bing, and they just noticed it (or decided to talk about it) now.

nhebb 14 years ago

Funny, the ad I see displayed with the search results is:

  Upgrade from IE6 Today
  Microsoft.com/IE9 Say Goodbye to Outdated Browsers.
  Download the Latest IE Browser Now!
glesica 14 years ago

Interesting that it comes up in DDG, which I thought was partially backed by Bing. They augment the results quite a bit, though, so not terribly surprising.

Also, I made myself sad when I typed "kogan.com" into the address bar to test DDG and was shocked when the actual web site came up. Didn't think that one through...

magoon 14 years ago

I use Bing, so this is disappointing - but we can only assume it is a mistake, and the most interesting part of this story will be how quickly Microsoft reverts & responds.

UnoriginalGuy 14 years ago

Their robots.txt file is being delivered as the wrong content type for me. It is being served as a "application/octet-stream" instead of a "text/html"

I have no idea what consequences this might have since I've never seen another site which does it. Some quick Googling turned up nothing.

Maybe Bing choked on the wrong content type and decided to blackball their entire domain in order to avoid indexing the unindexable?

  • X-Istence 14 years ago

    Why would you want to serve up a robot.txt as "text/html" when in reality it is "text/plain"?

Jacobi 14 years ago

When I perform a search on bing the first result is the kogan website ...

EDIT: It was the kogan.co.uk and not kogan.com since my country/region = UK

  • DanBC 14 years ago

    I'm in the UK. I get the UK site as the first hit. I don't get the .com.au sites, even if I search for [kogan.com.au]

    I've seen a few threads on HN where someone claims that Google has removed them from the search results (often after a Google update) and it turns out that the site had a weird set of errors. (mix ups about http and https, and about including or not the www.)

  • Jabbles 14 years ago

    Neither "kogan" nor "kogan.com" return the website for me.

damian2000 14 years ago

Ruslan Kogan must be rubbing his hands with glee at this development - more pricele$$ free publicity for his site.

DeepDuh 14 years ago

Maybe their crawler identifies as IE7?

brudgers 14 years ago

Just a thought, but I seem to recall that Google was giving higher rankings to sites that advocated upgrading to Chrome, and created a bit of embarrassment.

Given that Kogan.com advocates upgrading and all the linking to their website which occurred recently, perhaps it seems possible that a Microsoft algorithm designed to avoid similar SEO manipulation was triggered.

In other words, the way in which the Kogan.com story unfolded was sufficiently similar to the PR move by Google, that it triggered a Microsoft safeguard.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/247257/google_disciplines_its...

  • chrislomax 14 years ago

    They did this to themselves as it's against their guidelines to pay for page ranked incoming links. It was simply because in the end they were paying for the link to their site

Killobyte 14 years ago

"We never waged war against Microsoft over IE7, we simply wanted people to upgrade their web browsers..."

Maybe so, but the splash says "Use a better browser" and lists Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Opera. It would be ridiculous for Microsoft to remove the page from their search results because of this, but at just a glance, and maybe to the untrained user, it could look like the are waging war on IE as a whole, and not just trying to get users to "simply upgrade their browsers."

  • pyre 14 years ago

    IIRC, XP will only ever go as high as IE7 or IE8. Vista will only go as high as IE9. Anyone hanging around on those operating systems, will need to look outside of Microsoft for a more up-to-date browser.

  • raghavsethi 14 years ago

    That true. They could've simply linked to the IE9 download page.

    But I think MS's algorithm would have de-ranked the site because any IR algorithm considers the content of the page too - if the web page served to IE users is about redirecting to browser download pages, their crawler (which may identify itself as IE) might not consider it to be the best result about 'Kogan'.

mtgx 14 years ago

I think Microsoft themselves admitted that they do a great deal of manual editing for their search engine rankings.

gouranga 14 years ago

I reckon this is because the ranking algorithm deranked them when their click through from bing rate declined after the sudden publicity storm. Their #visitors delta probably went very negative after everyone stopped clicking links from various news sites.

They probably shot themselves.

  • jonursenbach 14 years ago

    Doubtful. Even searching "site:kogan.com" pulls up zero results while "site:kogan.co.uk" pulls up 1.9k results.

    Kogan.com is completely gone from their resultset.

Isofarro 14 years ago

Looks like Kogan only serves the UK and Australian market, there's no support from the US. Perhaps this is a ranking correction to delegating Kogan pages to UK or Oz specific searches rather than global or US.

gary4gar 14 years ago

If this is real, then Microsoft would is going to get into a long legal battle. I hope this is some technical glitch & not some random angry guy at Microsoft

  • freehunter 14 years ago

    There's only been one case I'm aware of where a site was penalized in search rankings and filed a lawsuit. That site lost. The only complaint that the judge seemed to find valid (although ultimately dismissed) was anti-trust allegations. Microsoft wouldn't be in that position in search.

    In short, there's no legal precedence for filing damages if you're dropped by a search engine. It would be hard to imagine what, if anything, Kogan would argue successfully.

    http://blog.ericgoldman.org/archives/2007/03/kinderstart_v_g...

sreyaNotfilc 14 years ago

This "tax" is elitist internet bullshit.

I'm all for using any browser that you'd want, but why go through elaborate lengths to put Microsoft down? Especially on a version of IE that's 3 iterations in the past.

I understand that IE7 may not be as great as the other browsers. I'm fine with being annoyed by that. But what about the other versions of IE? Why isn't there a link for IE9 or IE10?

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection