Instant indexing

Instant indexing is a feature offered by Internet search engines that enables users to submit content for immediate inclusion into the index.

Delayed inclusion

Certain search engine services may require an extended period of time for inclusion, which is seen as a delay and a frustration by website administrators who wish to have their websites appear in search engine results.[1]

Delayed inclusion may due to the size of the index that the service must maintain or due to corporate, political or social policies. Some services, such as Ask.com only index content collected by a crawler program which does not allow for manual adding of content to index.[2]

Criticisms

A criticism of instant indexing is that certain services filter results manually or via algorithms that prevent instant inclusion to avoid inclusion of content that violates the service's policies.

Instant indexing impacts the timeliness of the content included in the index. Given the manner in which many crawlers operate in the case of Internet search engines, websites are only visited if a some other website links to them. Unlinked web sites are never visited (see invisible web) by the crawler because it cannot reach the website during its traversal. It is assumed that unlinked websites are less authoritative and less popular, and therefore of less quality. Over time, if a website is popular or authoritative, it is assumed that other websites will eventually link to it. If a search engine service provides instant indexing, it bypasses this quality control mechanism by not requiring incoming links. This infers that the search engine's service produces lower quality results.

Select search services that offer such a service typically also offer paid inclusion, also referred to as inorganic search. This may reduce the quality of search results.

gollark: It *appears* that your thing is up and usable, though I just ran `nmap` on it since I can't actually join.
gollark: I think it assumes 25565 anyway.
gollark: That might actually be a public one, yes.
gollark: That's a netmask.
gollark: You can tell because it starts with "192.168", which is in one of the internal IP ranges or something like that.
  • "Don't Blink: Instant Indexing?". Web-Cite Exposure. 2003-03-26. Archived from the original on 2006-04-27. Retrieved 2006-09-23.
  • Stan Daniloski (2004-09-17). "The Wonderful World of Search Engines and Web Directories — A Search Engine Guide". Earth Station 9. Retrieved 2006-09-23.

See also

References

  1. "How to index your domains". Retrieved 2015-12-24.
  2. "How to Submit Your Site to Search Engines". Retrieved 2015-12-24.


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