{"id":53323,"date":"2022-11-23T04:43:11","date_gmt":"2022-11-23T09:43:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.kinexmedia.com\/?p=53323"},"modified":"2024-10-08T07:38:11","modified_gmt":"2024-10-08T11:38:11","slug":"google-decides-to-give-indexnow-protocol-a-try","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kinexmedia.com\/blog\/google-decides-to-give-indexnow-protocol-a-try\/","title":{"rendered":"Google Decides to Give \u2018IndexNow\u2019 Protocol a Try."},"content":{"rendered":"
Testing for IndexNow Protocol Set to Happen\u00a0 <\/strong><\/p>\n Earlier, Microsoft and Yandex announced a new initiative known as IndexNow, but Google seemed not ready to adopt the new system. IndexNow is a protocol that requires site owners to notify search engines about any changes in URLs. Unlike the previous procedure that heavily relied on search engine spiders that have to go into the web and crawl each URL, IndexNow is a more efficient approach.<\/p>\n Website managers or owners only have to directly submit the URL changes and related details to the search engines. This will serve as a signal for the search engines to crawl the URLs with updates immediately. With the changes in the URL, we mean any URL with new content<\/a>, updated or deleted content. Initially, it was only Microsoft Bing and Yandex following this protocol.<\/p>\n Google on the Move to Try out IndexNow<\/strong><\/p>\n Google openly stresses that its crawling efforts are efficient, but it will improve its sustainability efforts by leveraging the IndexNow protocol. This comes a few weeks after the official announcement of the IndexNow protocol.<\/p>\n In 2020, Googlebot began supporting HTTP\/2, a significant revision of the HTTP network protocol used by the web. HTTP\/2 is referred to as the next generation of HTTP, a protocol utilized by the web for data transfer. However, although Google uses HTTP\/2 in a majority of its crawls, no ranking benefit is attached to the change.<\/p>\n In a statement released by Google<\/strong>, Google told Search Engine Land that it follows a holistic approach to sustainability, including efforts to develop the most efficient and accurate index of the web. \u201cWe have been carbon neutral since 2007, and we\u2019re on pace to be carbon-free by 2030 across our data centers and campuses. We are encouraged by work to make web crawling more efficient, and we will be testing the potential benefits of this protocol,\u201d a Google spokesperson said.<\/em><\/p>\n What is IndexNow and How Can It Help Site Owners<\/strong><\/p>\n We would say that IndexNow is quite fast and can help site managers stay on track with their work. It only requires them to inform search engines about the latest content changes on their websites. It is a simple ping protocol that can help search engines instantly know that a URL and its content have been updated, deleted, or added. This can help search engines instantly reflect the changes in search results.<\/p>\n With IndexNow, all you got to do is create a key on your server. Then post a URL to Bing or any search engine to notify IndexNow. You don\u2019t have to do this for every search engine. By notifying a single search engine, all the participating search engines are able to see the changes. All you have to do is;<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
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