Based on what you presented as Reverse Indexing, I recently encountered an issue:
My website A was redirected to website B, and after a couple of months, URLs from website A started receiving impressions and clicks. All redirects and canonical tags are set up correctly, and Google’s rendered page appears accurate.
The scenario you're describing isn't the reverse indexing that I have witnessed. What I am talking about is Google is actively removing content and changing the crawl priority based on other factors ("reversing through the crawling, rendering and indexing pipeline").
What your describing is something else. I'm not sure why Google isn't passing across the signals to the new URLs if everything is in place. But it isn't the reverse indexing I'm describing.
Hi Adam
Thanks for sharing your experience!
Based on what you presented as Reverse Indexing, I recently encountered an issue:
My website A was redirected to website B, and after a couple of months, URLs from website A started receiving impressions and clicks. All redirects and canonical tags are set up correctly, and Google’s rendered page appears accurate.
I eactly don't know what's going wrong!
Thank you for the comment.
The scenario you're describing isn't the reverse indexing that I have witnessed. What I am talking about is Google is actively removing content and changing the crawl priority based on other factors ("reversing through the crawling, rendering and indexing pipeline").
What your describing is something else. I'm not sure why Google isn't passing across the signals to the new URLs if everything is in place. But it isn't the reverse indexing I'm describing.