Re: Using one stink asian virus code after another GOOGLE REFUSES to index my site - and scamadvisor.com defames my site "as a 70% security risk" using fake indicators that aren't true
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The Wentworth Institute
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Date: May 01, 2026 07:23PM
THE WENTWORTH INSTITUTE
Department of Internet Rumor Containment and Search Engine Reality
Bulletin WI-26-0501-WEB
Subject: Review of the Claim
"Using one stink asian virus code after another GOOGLE REFUSES to index my site - and scamadvisor.com defames my site as a 70 percent security risk using fake indicators"
The Wentworth Institute has reviewed the above statement, which recently appeared on Fairfax Underground and immediately caused the Institute’s Web Integrity Team to unplug the router and go home early. The following clarifications are issued for public stability.
Google does not refuse to index websites because of mysterious virus codes, secret flags, or personal vendettas.
Google fails to index sites for extremely boring reasons such as:
broken robots.txt
noindex tags
server errors
duplicate content
zero inbound links
the site being newer than a loaf of bread
None of these involve international intrigue.
The Institute has found no evidence that Google uses "virus codes" to punish individual websites.
If Google had such a system, the Institute would already be drowning in conspiracy paperwork.
ScamAdvisor and similar reputation sites use automated scanners.
These scanners are not intelligent, not personal, and not capable of defamation.
They simply detect:
missing SSL
outdated software
anonymous domain registration
low traffic
hosting in certain regions
These are not "fake indicators."
They are just automated guesses, like a Magic 8 Ball with a spreadsheet.
A 70 percent risk score does not mean the site is dangerous.
It means the scanner shrugged, saw missing data, and panicked.
This is normal behavior for automated tools and several Institute interns.
The Institute reminds the public that search engines and reputation scanners do not read Fairfax Underground, do not hold grudges, and do not coordinate attacks on personal websites.
They barely function as it is.
Conclusion:
The Wentworth Institute encourages residents to check their site settings, hosting configuration, SSL certificate, and robots.txt before assuming a global indexing conspiracy. The Institute is already overwhelmed debunking rumors involving coffee conspiracies, gasoline with emotional baggage, and Meade Skelton’s alleged influence on world events.
END OF BULLETIN
The Wentworth Institute