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Google Feedburner Now Defaulting to 301 Redirects

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

As of today we are changing this to be a “301 Permanent Redirect” because we’ve looked at the traffic enough to tell that there some benefit to changing this to a “301 Permanent Redirect” – in that some search engines that index the feeds themselves will consider these to be additional links that should be used in determining the popularity of your site.

This is the same way that “URL shortener” services send traffic and get treated by search engines, so we feel that this is consistent with the way that content is distributed today. This update should not change the number of clicks that come to your site from your feed nor should it significantly affect the number of clicks FeedBurner tracks for you.

According to Google, you don’t have to do anything – just keep burning your feeds to Feedburner or Adsense.

Google Feedburner is better as of this week, with the move to across the boards 301 redirects. Google says they have been steadily gathering data and inproving Feedburner since the launch in 2004, and see billions of hits per week.

Now they have done away with 302 redirect options, making 301s the standard. Why? The blog explains:

Today we are making an improvement that we think will serve our publishers better by making our service more compatible with search engines that crawl feeds.

When we started the service, one thing we were not sure of at the time was how the feed reading ecosystem would treat the links we rewrite in order to give you statistics on how many people click on your feed items.

For instance, on the previous post in this blog, we change the link in the feed item for “FeedBurner Terms of Service Update” from

http://adsenseforfeeds.blogspot.com/2009/08/feedburner-terms-of-service-update.html

to

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/MQiv/~3/Z8Es5QuvgEI/feedburner-terms-of-service-update.html

which sends the browser to that original URL, but allows us to first track the click.

As a technical detail, we rewrote these links with a code of “302 Temporary Redirect” which tells the browser or consuming service that the redirect is not permanent, and thus it would need to be read every time.

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