> Use robots.txt to prevent it being spidered. Dealing with the immediate attack isn't the problem, there are plenty of ways to do that. If the google spider has gone beserk, robots.txt isn't the method I'd want to rely on.
> and notify Google. See More "complain" than "notify". If the ISP's traffic usage protocols point to googlebot.com, is there any scam which someone could use successfully for some time to be deliberately obnoxious while pretending to be googlebot? I can't think of any. Volker -- Volker Kuhlmann is possibly list0570 with the domain in header http://volker.dnsalias.net/ Please do not CC list postings to me.
