Matt Cutts Refutes Google Toolbar Indexing Claims!
July 22nd, 2008 | 884 Views RSS Feed
Through his own official blog, Google's Matt Cutts has refuted the claims been raised many times over, that Google Toolbar at some point of time, helped Google index a web page. This issue was raised, when Information week reported that numerous UK O2 mobile network customers complained that many of the photos that had been taken with their mobiles phones and tagged as private were now publicly accessible online.
According to Ken Simpson (CEO, MailChannels), one of the primary reasons for this breach of privacy was that, Google Toolbar may be configured to pass URLs that one visits to Google for indexing. In a statement, he said, “If you run Google Toolbar, it knows pages you visit.”
However, Matt Cutts plainly denies this allegation and states, “Sorry, but if Ken Simpson is implying that the Google Toolbar led to these urls being crawled, then he’s mistaken.” Citing an example Matt asserts that Google Toolbar does not in any ways, help Google index URLs. According to Matt, when he ran the URL in question, i.e [inurl:mms2legacy], the very first result that came up was, the search results would be displayed with multiple references for the given string. This, according to Cutts is a clear indication that all the URLs assessed had been discovered by crawling regular old links.
Here at PageTraffic Blog, I had put up a related post in December 2006, where Matt Cutts had made it crystal clear that, Google Toolbar does not cause the pages to be indexed.
However, when faced with a question related to Googlebot crawling, Matt had this to say:
Q: Why is Googlebot downloading information from our “secret” web server?
Ans: (Matt Cutts) “It’s almost impossible to keep a web server secret by not publishing any links to it. As soon as someone follows a link from your “secret” server to another web server, your “secret” URL may appear in the referrer tag and can be stored and published by the other web server in its referrer log. So, if there’s a link to your “secret” web server or page on the web anywhere, it’s likely that Googlebot and other web crawlers will find it”.
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July 22nd, 2008 at 09:45
I'm the Ken Simpson referred to in the Information Week article.
While I agree that Google Toolbar does not index pages submitted to it, it is nonetheless important that services do more to protect user privacy. The average user believes that a URL sent to a friend in a private email will not be disclosed. The truth is that URLs are disclosed, as you suggest, in things like publicly accessible HTTP access logs — and even, as we discovered and revealed in a follow-up blog post at blog.mailchannels.com, in poorly secured application server status pages.