Hello everyone,
That is my 2nd submit and am a newbie to the design world but happen to be working in the computer Networking/communications arena for 20 years these days. I have a new question regarding a web site I am performing (my first ) The world wide web server is sitting over a home network using a private ip tackle and NAT is running using a firewall that is usually redirecting the traffic on the internet to the device and vise versa.
I ran a test at www. delorie. com to find out the site and am finding a message saying
" The world wide web server returned your " redirect". Google may not constantly follow redirects. The URL listed below reflect the page I was redirected to. "
now from what We can gather this principles would be with the nating I was doing on my own firewall but as I dont possess spare ip details laying around with regard to my web equipment there arent a great number of options available in my experience, is there anyone here that can tell me if this will be a problem with my Search results submissions (Google, LIVE MESSENGER, Yahoo) and if that’s the case is the merely way around this issue setting up a dmz
Thanks ahead
ikhan42
Google – They suggest having a 301 redierct when moving to your new site. 301 Redirects may Pass-On Google PageRank and all the related signals within some weeks.
LIVE MESSENGER Live Search – Doesnt follow long term redirects (301)
Additionally , it doesnt pass on the reputation earned with the old URL up to the new URL if it really is indexed.
Yahoo Search – As outlined by a representative with yahoo 301 redirects do not work at Digg and therefor may perhaps be counted as duplicate content and get you penalized based on the terms.
Just stuff i managed to uncover for you desire it helps
Any chance you might give us a connection to the site We might be able to get a better prospect of why the direct is happening. NATs should not produce a user-visible redirect — that is basically the point of the NAT. The kind of redirect they’re speaking about is an HTTP direct, and it is odd that the page would manufacture that without a person’s telling it to try and do so, as producing HTTP redirects may be the domain of the web server and it won’t do it without a rationale.
Yes that you’re correct no visable redirects here im for a nat network ISP (Mobile Operator).