Yes, it's possible to change a skin to output some description, but I really
want it to output page's content, not some generic words therefore it's not
that easy to achieve in wiki.

When I was talking about JS, I meant that page will contain empty span tags
like:

<span id="warning1"></span>

and some JS code next to factbox will contain actual warnings so they could
be enabled/disabled with a button or with user preferences. It'll also allow
showing warnings in factbox itself.

       Sergey


On Nov 7, 2007 1:42 AM, S Page <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Sergey Chernyshev wrote:
>
> > It seems that inline warnings are being crawled and indexed by Google
> > which is quite bad.
> >
> > Here's home Google listing for one of my pages looks:
> >
> >         *JavaScript: The Good Parts* - Technical Presentations
> >         <http://www.techpresentations.org/JavaScript:_The_Good_Parts>
> >
> >     warning.pngSorry, URIs from the range
> >     
> > "http://www.techpresentations.org{{#mediapath:*JavaScript*<http://www.techpresentations.org%7B%7B#mediapath:*JavaScript*>*The
> >  Good
> >     Parts*.jpg}}" are not available in this place. *...*
> >     www.techpresentations.org/
> >     <http://www.techpresentations.org/>*JavaScript*:_The_*Good*_*Parts*
> >     - 18k -
> >
> >
> > I fixed the error and google is probably going to update it eventualy,
> > but still, it's not very good idea to have embedded HTML in there -
> > maybe it's better to have them inserted using JS instead... it might
> > help with enabling/disabling it on per-user basis as well.
>
> You might be able to use the googleoff/on comment tags.  You want to
> turn off snippet and index, but you can probably just turn off
> everything with
> <!--googleoff: all-->
>   warning HTML stuff
> <!--googleon: all -->
>
> Details at
> <
> http://code.google.com/apis/searchappliance/documentation/46/admin_crawl/Preparing.html#pagepart
> >
> This definitely works for the Google Search Appliance, but I can't find
> conclusive evidence whether Google's own Web crawler respects these tags.
>
> Google tries to be smart about what to display in snippets, I'm not sure
> what heuristics work these days to discourage it.  Try looking at
> Google's cached version of your page for clues.  With JavaScript
> enabled, the SMW warnings are surrounded by <span style="display:
> none">, but the Google crawler sees the page with the warning in a
> regular <div>.
>
> <
> http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2007/09/improve-snippets-with-meta-description.html
> >
> suggests you can control the snippet using a
>  <META NAME="Description" CONTENT = "blah blah" /> tag, you might be
> able to change your skin to output something here.
>
> You can turn off the snippet altogether with
> <META NAME="GOOGLEBOT" CONTENT="NOSNIPPET"> ,
> see <http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?answer=35304>
>
> --
> =S Page
>
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-- 
Sergey Chernyshev
http://www.sergeychernyshev.com/
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