How does Google judge the age of a domain?

Discussion in 'Search Engine Optimization' started by MrPoloShirt, Jan 7, 2007.

  1. #1
    1. Google puts trust in certain sites based on how old they are. What information do they use?

    Age of domain per WHOIS? Or how long that site was first crawled in Google's cache?

    2. What if you buy a domain that expired, which was previously owned for many years? Remember, the domain was expired and has a new recent "registered" date on it's WHOIS listing. Will Google view this as a "new site"?
     
    MrPoloShirt, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  2. lordcage

    lordcage Active Member

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    #2
    I **THINK** using whois to get the age is useless, because each TLD have a different syntax for Creation or registry date.

    The easier and obvious way Google should do is to get the first date the domain was indexed..

    In this case (domain age), I **think** buying a expired domain would be a good idea..
     
    lordcage, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  3. mad4

    mad4 Peon

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    #3
    Sometimes they reset domains age and trust when they expire.
     
    mad4, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  4. thegypsy

    thegypsy Peon

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    #4
    This is also my understanding. Once it expires - it becomes a brand new domain in essence
     
    thegypsy, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  5. manageyourlinks

    manageyourlinks Peon

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    #5
    age is a crucial factor that is so many times over looked.

    age is a factor for basically every optimizing factor, link age, domain age, interior page age etc. etc.

    the older the better, across the board.
     
    manageyourlinks, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  6. MrPoloShirt

    MrPoloShirt Peon

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    #6
    Thanks for telling me what I already know Capt Obvious.
     
    MrPoloShirt, Jan 7, 2007 IP
    lorien1973 likes this.
  7. MrPoloShirt

    MrPoloShirt Peon

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    #7
    Thanks, that's what I was worried about.

    The guy who runs BlackhateSEO who was interviewed on Shoemoney's show said for his final tip that it's best not to register a new domain, but to buy an already existing one. You'll save a lot of time that way. I was wondering about the specifics of this.
     
    MrPoloShirt, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  8. MrPoloShirt

    MrPoloShirt Peon

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    #8
    Since it seems to be questionable, if one plans to build a quality site, I would say buy an existing one. Thanks.
     
    MrPoloShirt, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  9. ainmohd

    ainmohd Peon

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    #9
    You are right.

    I have a lot of domains (not .com, .net or .org) more than 5 years old and there is no way for Google to read their foreign WHOIS (outside the US) registries.

    Upon registration, a new birth cert will be issued despite many reincarnations.
     
    ainmohd, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  10. MrPoloShirt

    MrPoloShirt Peon

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    #10
    I'm thinking maybe Google has a special classification for foreign domains.

    Maybe foreign domains are ranked low on the US version of Google, but high on their own version of Google (like Google China or something like that).
     
    MrPoloShirt, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  11. reapr

    reapr Peon

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    #11
    Do they use archive . org ?
     
    reapr, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  12. MrPoloShirt

    MrPoloShirt Peon

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    #12
    I don't see why they would when their OWN archives (cached pages) are far more detailed than Archive.org's.

    I can promise you they don't use Archive.org, lol.
     
    MrPoloShirt, Jan 7, 2007 IP
  13. mrone

    mrone Peon

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    #13
    This is also my fear, recently I have purchased a .com domain which about 1 and a half year a go was in use and it was ranked pretty high, (which I don’t know why they let it expire, I think maybe they where band from the SE’s, I don’t know) however I do hope that this is not the case. P.S I am still not even indexed
     
    mrone, Jan 8, 2007 IP
  14. manageyourlinks

    manageyourlinks Peon

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    #14
    Did I quote you and respond to you. No.

    I was informing others who might not have been up to speed like you supposedly are.

    Why dont you email google and ask them. You will probably get a better response then posting on a forum and bashing people who responded.
     
    manageyourlinks, Jan 8, 2007 IP
  15. MrPoloShirt

    MrPoloShirt Peon

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    #15
    But it wouldn't be as fun, now would it?
     
    MrPoloShirt, Jan 8, 2007 IP