by Anne Brown


Will you be able to guess what Google does to individuals probing self-help health check web pages? You can do the experiment yourself and input keywords and phrases associated with it and see that Google will redirect your search results to a security page where you will be requested to type in a password just to just be sure you are a genuine human and not a robot trying to log on the checkup site.

It's fascinating to know why Google does this. As you understand, search results in Google are partially as a result of how many individuals accessing the websites or through Search Engine Optimisation or SEO. The shady side of SEO can involve many techniques, together with the use of robots, to copy real human visits to a web site in the attempt of tricking Google into thinking that the site has relevancy because of the number of visits.

Using the redirect to the security page, you'll be able to then convince Google that you're a human visitor and not a robot. And that you decisively wish to consult a checkup website.

This provides you the knowledge that the medical site you accessed gives you secure information. After all, your wellbeing and your family's wellness can depend on it.

It is a creditable move for Google. And we can safely assume that their work doesn't stop - since it might only be a matter of time before shady tacticians could develop a super intelligent robot that will be able to understand writing and put in passwords.

People rely on Google greatly for things they need to better care for their family. Moms consider the web to do research wellbeing, to inquire about recipes for good and quick-fix foods, as well as to entertain themselves with the latest gossip. The integrity of those information is essential because you can imagine the nightmare that could happen if a mother provides the wrong drug for an ill toddler, or puts the incorrect substances for any dish, or simply gets the latest buzz in the wrong.




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