In one of our recent cases, we were able to achieve the desired result through work with the registrar and the regulator of the domain zone. After that, the domain was de-delegated, and the website completely dropped out of search results. The monitoring data shows how the resource first lost part of its SERP presence and then disappeared from the top results entirely,
going from 100% visibility to 0% within a short period of time.
In cases like this, it is important to understand that deindexation is not always about “SEO magic.” Very often, the result is achieved through a properly structured legal and technical chain: documenting the violation, working through the domain infrastructure, communicating with the registrar, involving the regulator, and only after that cleaning up the remaining traces in search.
We also work with the Google Remote Content tool, which helps remove websites from search results within 1–3 days after a domain has been de-delegated.
This is especially useful in situations where the website itself is already effectively offline, but traces of it still remain in the SERP.
Cases like this clearly show that in reputation-related matters, the result often lies not only in search optimization,
but also in the proper handling of the domain and legal side of the issue.
Interested? Get in touch with us at @clean_search (telegramm)
We currently offer package solutions for teams and can take on 20, 30, or more websites at the same time as part of an abuse strategy.