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#2
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I'm have a site that was listed at 128,000 over all that has been totally knocked off of google. Fun Fun.. So now I'm trying to recover and it's not looking so good.. This 301 redirect to a .htaccess for a url with out the "www" has my attention tho. Generally I declare an "alias" in my httpd.conf file for the domain name with out the "www". So that in my case, Apache will answer to the domain as either www.mydomain.com or mydomain.com. In the past this has worked well but I'm wondering if it's causing a problem now. Is there a benefit to having a 301 redirect vs. the "Alias" in my httpd.conf file? Would this cause the bot to think I have duplicate information since DNS points both at the same IP? Any comments are welcome. Kind Regards, Axten |
#3
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I'm have a site that was listed at 128,000 over all that has been totally knocked off of google. Fun Fun.. So now I'm trying to recover and it's not looking so good.. This 301 redirect to a .htaccess for a url with out the "www" has my attention tho. Generally I declare an "alias" in my httpd.conf file for the domain name with out the "www". So that in my case, Apache will answer to the domain as either www.mydomain.com or mydomain.com. In the past this has worked well but I'm wondering if it's causing a problem now. |
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Is there a benefit to having a 301 redirect vs. the "Alias" in my httpd.conf file? Would this cause the bot to think I have duplicate information since DNS points both at the same IP? |
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