| Google, Yahoo and Microsoft Agree to Standard Sitemaps Protocol |
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The protocol is offered under an Attribution-ShareAlike Creative Commons License, so it can be used by any search engine, derivative variations using the same license can be created and it can be used for commercial purposes. Any time competitors agree on open standards, that’s an enabler of further innovation and something to celebrate. It’s also great to see Creative Commons receiving all the more validation. Search engine guru Danny Sullivan wrote the following tonight about the move.
Several people have made early public statements indicating that the next move will be to develop meaningful standards support for robots.txt files. Imagine a future when these players agree on standards for user control of data, microformats or truly neutral party click-fraud tracking and prevention. Maybe that’s crazy. Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware. Read more at: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/50010390/. |
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In an encouraging act of collaboration, Google, Yahoo and Microsoft announced tonight that they will all begin using the same Sitemaps protocol to index sites around the web. Now based at 










