By Elinor Mills, 2 February 2006 08:40
NEWS
Dell apparently learnt the hard way this week that companies have to be careful to ensure information they store on the internet and want to keep hidden is not automatically added to a search engine index for everyone on the web to see.
Specifications for future Dell laptops were accessible via Google's search site before the content was pulled from a Dell file transfer protocol site and from Google's cache.
Google, like the other major search engines, has an automated search engine that sends software robots called "spiders" out to crawl the web and find sites to add to the index of websites it maintains. Because the spiders follow links running from one website to others, they pick up sites on their own without webmasters having to manually submit them to search engines.
Webmasters can also provide the URL, or numerical web address, for pages they want crawled, and they can submit detailed site maps to Google, according to Google's "information for webmasters" pages.
Webmasters who want to keep some or all of their site private from the Googlebot can put a standard document called "robot.txt" at the root of the server that instructs the crawler not to download content. If the removal request is urgent, the webmaster can submit a request via Google's automatic URL removal system but must provide an email address and password first.
Content that has been removed can still be viewed through Google's cache, which is a "snapshot" and archive of each page crawled. Webmasters can prevent pages from being cached by inserting specific code on them.
Elinor Mills writes for CNET News.com

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1. Tony
Thanks for the round up on how search spiders work! What about DELL? I thought that was what the story was about! So some specs got downloaded from an FTP site that were available on DELLS search site. Big deal! Care to elaborate?