Adderall spam pages on my website?
Checking my site's files, these pages definitely do not exist anywhere, and they lead to 404 errors when you link to them. Any idea how to fix this?
I've pasted from the google search for adderall reco jeans, here:
# Smoke Adderall - Buy Cheap Adderall Online - Best Prices!!! IF YOU MISS A DOSE OF THIS Adderall Medication take it as. Possible for my Internet DOSE OF THIS Adderall for Schedule II Substances Schedule II substances ... www.recojeans.com/shop/adderall-52.html - Cached #
Adderall Overdose - Buy Cheap Adderall Online - Best Prices!!! Attention Deficit Disorder medication DOSE OF THIS Adderall Medication take ... www.recojeans.com/shop/adderall-65.html - Cached #
Adderall Prescription - Buy Cheap Adderall Online - Best Prices!!! Adderall XR webpage entitled DOSE OF THIS Adderall in adolescence was ... www.recojeans.com/shop/adderall-70.html - Cached
10 comments
[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 45.3 ms ] threadThe first place I'd check is your .htaccess file--that's a common place where the hackers hide stuff. Also check for new/recently-added files in your directory. Some WordPress hackers will go so far as to inject malicious code straight into the WP database.
One tool you can use is a feature from google.com/webmasters called "Fetch as Googlebot." Once you prove that you own the site, you can tell Google to fetch your page and you'll see exactly what we see. This is a great way to tell if you've really cleaned out the hacks.
Another tool is our automatic url removal tool, also at google.com/webmasters . You can block a url in robots.txt and then use that tool to remove that page from Google's index.
If you've gotten everything, then the pages should start to leave Google's index after a few days. The hackers can be quite smart though, and if they compromise your webhost then it's even more painful to scrape them off your site because the hacked pages can return even if your site is well-patched.
Can we not ask them to remove their site from Google that seems like drastic errancy as it takes months and sometimes longer for reinclusion requests to go through.
Seems like a hasty and unneccesary methodology to the problem.
check you footer and header espesialy
Surely you'd expect sites like that to get penalized pronto? Isn't Google able to detect this algorithmically?