Crawling is the process by which Googlebot discovers new and updated pages to be added to the Google index.
We use a huge set of computers to fetch (or "crawl") billions of
pages on the web. The program that does the fetching is called
Googlebot (also known as a robot, bot, or spider). Googlebot uses an
algorithmic process: computer programs determine which sites to crawl,
how often, and how many pages to fetch from each site.
Google's crawl process begins with a list of web
page URLs, generated from previous crawl processes, and augmented with
Sitemap data provided by webmasters. As Googlebot visits of each these
websites it detects links on each page and adds them to its list of
pages to crawl. New sites, changes to existing sites, and dead links
are noted and used to update the Google index.
Google doesn't accept payment to crawl a site more
frequently, and we keep the search side of our business separate from
our revenue-generating AdWords service.
Be the first to rate this post
- Currently 0/5 Stars.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5