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It's a brand new website and if you're interested, here's more information. Honestly, given what happened, I didn't want to assume that wasn't the cause, so I thought it would be best to check. But alas, the site's documentation hasn't changed at all. Go to Step Check Penalty I'm already familiar with its history, and I'm already confident that it won't be penalized. But again, I want to do my due diligence and you know what they say when you assume! I jumped into Webmaster Tools and looked at the recently added Manual Actions tab. As expected: No manual web spam operations were found to work well.
But we don't rule out algorithmic penalties that won't be told to you (oh my gosh, that moible number data causes some confusion). For its part, there is no evidence of accidental or intentional duplication of content on the site or elsewhere on the web. As for those mean penguins, given that I'm the first to work on the site and I don't build keyword anchor text links for my clients, the site has never seen any keyword anchor text, let alone enough to set off Alarm bell. After these inspections I am convinced that the fine is not responsible. Check for removal features in Webmaster Tools Make another check in your Webmaster Tools account: Go to Index removal and check.
Check to see if the page has been added as a removal request (either accidentally or on purpose). You never know it's best to check it out. There is no deletion request in this case. It was at this point that I started thinking: What else could this be? ! Checking Unexpected Code The day this happened, I met up with a good friend and colleague of mine and had a drink and something to eat at the bar. I went through the whole story with what I've done so far, and Andrew suggested something I hadn't considered: although highly unlikely, what if the home page now showed the (not found) code instead of the code.
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