I think this is actually easy to do. Just place an appropriate robots.txt in the area you don't want indexed, and Google will respect it. If you want to be really sure, ban all of the IP ranges that Google uses from your web server. The parent obviously has a good point, though. I don't see why a site wouldn't want to be indexed by Google.
Some of the "baby bells" have done well since the AT&T breakup in the 1980s, but it's important to note that Bell South is the only one that hasn't merged with something else. Bell Atlantic bought NYNEX (two baby bells; NYNEX was created at the breakup as what was formerly known as NY Telephone and NE Telephone) merged to make Bell Atlantic. (NOT Verizon; the name "Verizon" came into use when Bell Atlantic bought GTE, because that made the company exted west.) So perhaps the four parts may merge with other related companies, or perhaps even eventually with each-other.
biggest problem is price.
Here in NY I can get cable and DSL for $35
(of course both with port blocking and not being allowed to host stuff)
Perhaps I'll convince my parents to pay $20 extra a month.
Yeah right.
Shhhhh!
I think this is actually easy to do. Just place an appropriate robots.txt in the area you don't want indexed, and Google will respect it. If you want to be really sure, ban all of the IP ranges that Google uses from your web server. The parent obviously has a good point, though. I don't see why a site wouldn't want to be indexed by Google.
http://www.osnews.com/permalink.php?news_id=12813& comment_id=66297
This is true. You don't even need to give a e-mail address (let alone a real one) to create an account. I don't see how this really helps.
Wrong again. They evolved. From aliens.
Does anyone have a copy of version 0.9.7 (I think that was the latest one, before it was taken down.) of http://www.ashotoforangejuice.com/jsrisk.jso m/* , but obviously had no luck. Is there any chance that Google might be caching it? They certianly have the HTML (which is pretty much worthless) here http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cache:RrdLpS5Pm5IJ: ashotoforangejuice.com/gmrisk.html+site:ashotofora ngejuice.com&hl=en&client=firefox-a , but I don't know whether Google caches javascript files.
I tried looking for it on http://web.archive.org/web/*/ashotoforangejuice.c
By the way, I have 0.9.5 if anyone wants it.
Some of the "baby bells" have done well since the AT&T breakup in the 1980s, but it's important to note that Bell South is the only one that hasn't merged with something else. Bell Atlantic bought NYNEX (two baby bells; NYNEX was created at the breakup as what was formerly known as NY Telephone and NE Telephone) merged to make Bell Atlantic. (NOT Verizon; the name "Verizon" came into use when Bell Atlantic bought GTE, because that made the company exted west.) So perhaps the four parts may merge with other related companies, or perhaps even eventually with each-other.
biggest problem is price. Here in NY I can get cable and DSL for $35 (of course both with port blocking and not being allowed to host stuff) Perhaps I'll convince my parents to pay $20 extra a month. Yeah right.
Most ISPs don't allow this.
Optimum Online blocks 80 and others I think.
22 is left open, I know.
SMTP and FTP are almost definetly blocked