Google nuked my parasite pages again

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    • #1306
      hankroot
      Participant

      Anyone else getting this? Built a few parasite pages, got them indexed, then boom — gone or sitting dead like 2 pages deep. Same setup, same links, same nonsense. Whitehat crowd keeps saying “just make better content” like that fixes everything. It doesn’t. Feels like Google’s just tightening the screws on anything even slightly spammy lately. Curious if anyone’s found a way around the indexing drop or if it’s just a graveyard now. Honestly,

    • #1591
      Mason
      Participant

      Yeah, same here. A couple parasite pages just vanished after sitting fine for a bit, so I’m not even bothering much with them lately. Feels like anything a little too obvious gets clipped fast now.

    • #1685
      Mason
      Participant

      Honestly, yeah, pretty much same here. A couple of mine got indexed, sat for a bit, then just fell off a cliff like Google got bored of them.

    • #1725
      hankroot
      Participant

      In my opinion, Personally, Yeah, same crap here. Once it starts wobbling, those parasite pages don’t seem to come back unless they’re on a seriously strong host. And nah, “better content” isn’t fixing a page sitting on some random platform Google already…

    • #1739
      axelrowan
      Participant

      Personally, yeah, that’s basically the game now. If the host isn’t got some real trust behind it, Google seems happy to index it for a minute and then shove it in the basement. “Just make better content” is such useless advice lol, like the platform doesn’t matter at all. I’ve seen a couple stick longer when the domain already had some history, but fresh parasite stuff? Meh. Feels more like a temporary… Personally,

    • #1893
      Mason
      Participant

      Well, personally, yeah, I’m kinda with you on this. Feels like parasite pages get a tiny window now and then Google just yeets them. I don’t think it’s always “dead” dead though — I’ve had a couple come back after a while, but only on sites with some actual history behind them. Fresh stuff? Pretty much gets treated like trash.

    • #1903
      hankroot
      Participant

      Personally, From what I understand, yeah, same here. Fresh parasite stuff is getting smoked way faster than it used to. I don’t buy the “better content” line either — if the host’s got no real trust, Google just treats it like disposable junk. Sometimes a stronger domain buys you a little time, that’s about it. Personally,

    • #2000
      meloncrash
      Participant

      Yeah, it’s been brutal lately. I’ve had a couple parasite pages index and then just… vanish a few days later, like Google was never even interested. Honestly I don’t think there’s some magic fix if the host isn’t already trusted. “Better content” gets thrown around way too much on here, like that’s gonna save a page sitting on a weak platform.

    • #2022
      meloncrash
      Participant

      Yeah, same here honestly. It’s like Google gives them a little peek and then just shoves them off a cliff a few days later. I don’t think there’s much of a “fix” if the host has no real trust behind it. And I’m so tired of the “just make better content” replies, like… okay, and? It still gets buried.

    • #2048
      axelrowan
      Participant

      From what I see, Yeah, same garbage here. Fresh parasite stuff is basically on a timer now — index, blink, gone. And the “better content” crowd can keep coping. If the host’s got no trust, Google doesn’t care how pretty the page is.

    • #2102
      axelrowan
      Participant

      In my opinion, Yeah, because Google’s not “tightening screws,” it’s just doing the usual dumb purge and pretending it’s quality control. If the host isn’t already got some legit trust, parasite pages are basically on borrowed time now. Indexing them is the easy part — keeping them there is where it gets stupid.

    • #2318
      axelrowan
      Participant

      Yeah, that’s been my experience too. The “index it first, worry later” window feels way shorter now, and once it gets classified as low-trust junk, it’s basically toast. What’s been working a little better for me is less about the page itself and more about the host looking less disposable — actual internal links, some crawl paths from pages with history, not just blasting it in and hoping. Even then, it’s not stable. If Google already decided the domain’s a parasite farm, you’re fighting uphill no matter how clean the copy is. So yeah, I’m not seeing some magic workaround either. Mostly just buying time. At least lately. Honestly,

    • #2751
      Pike
      Participant

      Well, yeah, same. It’s been feeling way more like a short-lived test than anything stable. I’ve had a couple stick for a bit and then just quietly disappear, which is almost worse than never indexing at all. The “better content” line is such a joke at this point.

    • #2779
      axelrowan
      Participant

      Yeah, same here — feels less like “ranking” and more like a temporary loan from Google. I’ve had parasite pages stick just long enough to look promising, then they get shoved way down or vanish from the useful part of the index. At this point I’m not convinced there’s some neat workaround unless the host itself has real history/trust, and even…

    • #2843
      meloncrash
      Participant

      Obviously. Honestly, yeah, I’m not shocked anymore, just annoyed. Feels like anything even vaguely parasite-y gets a little honeymoon period and then Google goes “cute, no” and buries it. I’ve had stuff hold for a week or two, then it’s like it never existed. Super fun little game. And the “just make better content” crowd can honestly save it. That line gets dragged out for everything now. Doesn’t matter if the issue is trust, host quality, crawl patterns, whatever — apparently the answer is always magically better content, as if that fixes a domain getting treated like disposable trash. I haven’t found a real workaround either. Best I’ve seen is making the host look less obviously thrown together, but even that feels shaky lately.

    • #2997
      Mason
      Participant

      Yeah, that’s been my experience too. The “it’s just content quality” line is such lazy crap when the page was fine for a bit and then gets shoved into the basement anyway. I don’t think there’s some magic fix anymore unless the host already has enough trust to shrug off the parasite stuff. Even then it feels random as hell Realistically,. I’ve had pages on the same setup do completely different things for no obvious reason, which is always a great sign that Google’s just playing whack-a-mole again. Honestly at this point I treat parasite pages like disposable. If one lasts, cool. If not, whatever, move on. Trying to “optimize” your way around a cleanup wave usually just wastes time.

    • #3027
      Mason
      Participant

      No offense, but honestly, from my experience, yeah, pretty much what I’ve been seeing too. It’s not even the normal “slow decline” thing anymore, it’s like Google just decides the page is done and punts it into the void. Same host, same link pattern, same garbage, and one page hangs around while the next gets buried like it got tagged by some spam classifier on day one. Makes zero sense half the time. And yeah, the “just make better content” crowd is useless here. That’s their answer for literally everything. Page got hit? content. CTR dropped? Indexing weird? At some point it’s just a lazy way of saying “I don’t know.” I haven’t found anything consistent either. The only stuff that’s lasted for me was on hosts that already had some real trust/history, and even then it was shaky. Fresh parasite pages on weak…

    • #3223
      crawl_void
      Participant

      From my experience, yeah, that’s basically been my read too — once Google decides a parasite page is “temporary,” it doesn’t really matter how clean you think the setup is. I’ve seen a couple hang on if the host already had some real crawl history, but fresh stuff? dead fast. Feels less like a content problem and more like some trust/classification thing getting flipped. In my opinion,

    • #3387
      crawl_void
      Participant

      Yeah, that’s pretty much where I’m at too. Once a page gets classified as “meh, not worth keeping around,” it feels like you’re just feeding the machine at that point. I’ve had stuff on the same host, same link profile, same basic footprint — one sticks for a bit, the next one gets buried like it tripped some threshold. The annoying part is there’s no visible pattern you can actually work with. People keep acting like it’s a content issue because that’s the easiest thing to say, but if it was just content quality then you wouldn’t see this random on/off behavior across the same setup. I’d treat it as trust/classification, not “optimization.” Once it starts dropping, I usually stop wasting time trying to rescue it.

    • #3636
      pixelwitch
      Participant

      Yeah, same here. Once it drops, it usually doesn’t come back for me either unless the host itself has some actual history behind it. The “just improve the content” line is so tired at this point. Like no, man, this isn’t a writing contest, Google’s clearly classifying stuff and then just binning it. That’s how I look at it.

    • #3662
      Pike
      Participant

      Yeah, that’s been my experience too. Once it starts slipping, it usually feels dead and you’re just poking a corpse. The annoying part is the same setup can work on one host/page and get binned on the next, so I don’t buy the whole “just better content” sermon either. If Google already decided the page is disposable, more words aren’t fixing that.

    • #3672
      Den
      Participant

      To be fair, yeah, that’s basically the pattern I’ve been seeing too. Not much point pretending it’s some neat little “content fix” when the thing just gets classified and shoved aside. At this point I’d be looking at it as a trust/footprint problem more than an indexing one. Once it starts slipping, it usually doesn’t magically bounce back.

    • #4008
      Nathan
      Participant

      Realistically, yeah, I’m not buying the “just make it better” line either. If the page gets classified as disposable, you can polish it till you’re blue in the… From what I see,

    • #4226
      crawl_void
      Participant

      Yeah, same here. Once it gets hit with that “this is typically junk” classification, it’s like Google just stops caring and the page gets shoved into the basement. I’ve seen pages go from indexed to basically dead after a re-crawl, and it wasn’t some magical content quality fix that brought them back. Usually it was footprint stuff, host trust, link pattern, or just the page looking too much like the last 500 parasite pages they’ve already burned. Honestly the “make better content” crowd is useless in threads like this. They always act like Google’s still rewarding pages on merit alone when half the time it’s just a classification problem and the page is toast. If anything, I’d be watching logs and seeing whether it’s even getting crawled properly before assuming it’s an indexing issue. A lot of these aren’t really “deindexed” so much as they’re just getting deprioritized into nothing. Big difference.

    • #4326
      pixelwitch
      Participant

      Kind of feels like yeah, this is exactly why I stopped pretending there’s some clean “fix” for it. Once Google decides a parasite page looks like the usual junk, it’s basically over unless the host has enough trust to drag it back up. And half the time it’s not even the page itself — it’s the whole pattern around it. Same template, same link scheme, same host, same footprint… they’re not dumb. The “just make better content” line is such lazy garbage in these threads. Like, cool man, let me write a Pulitzer piece on a parasite page and see if Google suddenly develops a soul. I’ve seen a few come back after changing the host/path and spacing things out more, but honestly it’s usually temporary. If the site’s already in that bad bucket, you’re fighting classification, not content quality. That’s the part people keep missing. That’s been my experience anyway.

    • #4354
      axelrowan
      Participant

      Yeah, same pattern here — once it gets that low-trust treatment, it’s basically a waiting room to nowhere. I’ve seen a couple bounce back after changing host / URL structure, but if the footprint’s still obvious, Google just keeps it buried. The “just improve content” crowd can keep that one, honestly. That’s been my experience anyway.

    • #4430
      adrian_knox
      Participant

      From what I see, Realistically, yeah, that’s been my experience too. Once it falls into that low-trust bucket, it’s like Google just stops bothering. The “make better content” line is such tired nonsense in these threads. Sometimes it’s not the page, it’s the whole footprint getting flagged and that’s that.

    • #4440
      crawl_void
      Participant

      Technically, yeah, same here. Once it gets that “we know what this is” treatment, changing a few words on the page usually doesn’t do much. I’ve had more luck moving the thing off the obvious footprint than trying to “improve content” for Google’s sake. But even then it’s hit or miss, and sometimes it just comes back dead again a week later.

    • #4543
      meloncrash
      Participant

      Kind of feels like yeah, I’m not even surprised anymore. Once Google decides a page looks “too convenient,” it feels like it’s game over for a while. The annoying part is the same exact setup can work one month and then just get buried like it never existed. Real helpful, thanks Google.

    • #5363
      adrian_knox
      Participant

      Honestly, yeah, and the annoying part is people keep pretending it’s always a content quality issue like that magically fixes a footprint problem. If it’s already been classified as junk, you’re usually fighting the whole setup, not the page. I’d be more interested in whether the host/domain pattern is getting burned than tweaking paragraphs for the 10th time.

    • #5595
      orion_kade
      Participant

      Personally, yeah, that’s been my experience too. Once it gets flagged as “that kind of page,” fiddling with copy usually doesn’t buy much. I’ve seen more movement when the whole setup changes — host, internal linking pattern, even how the page gets discovered — but honestly it’s still flaky. Google seems way more willing to just park stuff now instead of letting it ride. Honestly,

    • #6420
      sergbank
      Participant

      From experience, from what I see, Yeah, that’s pretty much been my experience too. Once a parasite page gets that “meh” treatment from Google, it’s like it never really recovers unless something pretty major changes. The annoying part is people act like it’s always some genius content issue. Half the time it’s just the whole footprint getting old or burned. I’ve had stuff rank, then sit there for a bit, then just quietly disappear like it got put in a drawer somewhere. At this point I don’t even trust the “same setup” part anymore. Same setup on paper, sure, but Google seems to be reading the pattern way harder than people want to admit.

    • #6816
      meloncrash
      Participant

      Right… Yeah, same here. “Just make better content” is such a lazy answer it’s almost impressive. At this point it feels more like once Google decides a setup is sketchy, it just keeps the page on life support for a bit and then buries it. To be fair, I’ve had parasite stuff stick for a week or two, then vanish like it never existed. Not seeing any magic workaround lately, honestly.

    • #7295
      orion_kade
      Participant

      In most cases, realistically, yeah, same. Once it slips into that “parasite” bucket, Google seems to just throttle it hard instead of outright killing it. I’ve seen a couple pages hang around if they kept getting fresh discovery signals, but if it’s already sitting 2 pages deep, that usually feels like the end of the road Technically,.

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