Hi Adam,

Is the content in an IFRAME necessarily indexed?  That's always been a
gray area for me.



On Wed, Sep 9, 2009 at 3:43 AM, Adam<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Surely the fact we can embed waves into websites means a wave can be
> indexed... *in a way* - Not it's purest form.
>
> On Sep 7, 10:20 pm, Jason Salas <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>> Hi everyone,
>>
>> Here's something I thought about last night in the car as my technical
>> marketing side took hold...since at the moment waves are "published"
>> to the public Web, I think we can assume that their contained content
>> is NOT spidered/indexed by Google Search. But on the contrary, what
>> are the opportunities down the road for those who choose to run their
>> own wave servers and actually have their data be listed for searches
>> (i.e., educators, government agencies, marketing firms)?
>>
>> Will/should we be able to toggle the ability for Wave content to be
>> discovered and regenerated in perpetuity (like Twitter), or have such
>> data be hands-off, being inherently messaging of a privileged nature
>> (like Facebook)?
>>
>> Thought?
>>
>> Jason :)
>> [email protected]
> >
>

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