I have a site with UGC in many languages. The translation I'm doing is for the titles so for each page I have multiple copies, one per language. I want to make sure
- Search engines don't see this as duplicate content.
- Search engines direct to the right language link.
What I've done is specifying the language in a sub domain, so for each page I have:
mydomain.com/page
ja.mydomain.com/page
es.mydomain.com/page
And in each one of those pages added in the HTML
<link rel="alternate" hreflang="en" href="http:/mydomain.com/page" />
<link rel="alternate" hreflang="jp" href="http://ja.mydomain.com/page" />
In order to make sure people are viewing the right language I'm redirecting according to the IP of the viewer, to the right subdomain. For example if I get a visitor from Japan I'm redirecting to ja.mydomain.com/page while leaving an option to change language manually.
Is there a way to avoid the redirecting I'm doing and let search engines link to the right page? Should I specify canonical for these pages to avoid duplicate content? Should I specify geo-targeting per subdomain in google webmaster tools?
accept-languageor just putting a message? Can it really be considered cloacking if I'm doing the redirect for users and Google as long as they are from the same GeoIP? In your site, is the Japanese version indexed and linked to by google? – Noam Apr 20 '13 at 11:30