SiteTruth now recognizes addresses and postal codes for
- Australia (AU)
- Canada (CA)
- United Kingdom (UK)
- United States (US)
More countries will be added over time.
SiteTruth now recognizes addresses and postal codes for
More countries will be added over time.
One of the data sources used by SiteTruth is PhishTank, which distributes an XML feed of hostile URLs. Since 1800 PDT 2007-10-10, PhishTank’s file has had no phishing entries. As a result, SiteTruth is not correctly rating phishing sites at this time. The operators of PhishTank have been notified.
Update: Problem fixed 1040 PDT 2007-10-12
We’ve revised our rating detail pages, the ones that appear when you click on a rating icon, to better explain how SiteTruth arrived at a rating. Problems with the site appear in red.
Aliasing of web sites, where multiple domains or URLs point to the same content, is a difficult area for search engines. Are “www.example.com” and “example.com” the same site? How can you tell?
SiteTruth, like most search engines, understands redirects. We recommend, as does Google, that webmasters pick one domain name for their site and redirect all others to it. For example, redirect “www.example.com” to “example.com”. Or vice versa.
SiteTruth rates the “base domain”, the domain one buys from a registrar. SiteTruth is about site ownership, so we have to work on the basis of what constitutes “property” on the Web. That’s a base domain.
If your base domain doesn’t work as a web site, and doesn’t redirect to your preferred URL, your site may receive a low rating.
As a service to webmasters, SiteTruth has some webmaster tools. One of these, the “site viewer”, reads web pages, parses them, cleans them up, deletes any active content, and redisplays them. This shows a page in the form our system read it. It’s useful as a means of seeing a search engine’s view of a page.
It’s not a general purpose web proxy, but some users have been using it that way. So we now place a banner at the top of each page it produces.
SiteTruth exists to solve one of the Web’s biggest problems – unidentified, and possibly fake, on-line businesses.
Every on-line commerce web site must display the name and address of the business behind the site. That’s the law in much of the developed world. SiteTruth tries to identify that business, then find information about it. That check is used to influence search rankings. That’s SiteTruth.
Try it at SiteTruth.com.
Comments and complaints
September 22nd, 2007Comments and complaints about SiteTruth go here.
Before complaining about a low rating of your own site, please read SiteTruth for Webmasters. In most cases, you can fix the problem yourself.
Posted in User comments | Comments Closed