If you don’t want a search engine to read some or all of the files on your site, you can create a robots.txt file. (Looking through the blog archive, I realize I’ve never gone through the construction and contents of that important file, so this is a promise to one day return and fix that!)
When you want the opposite – accessible pages and author credit, create a humans.txt file. Although not an “official” standard, it is a fun way to acknowledge the (sometimes many) hardworking individuals behind the creation of a web site.
An example is:
/* TEAM */ Leader: Mike Wilson Site: http://www.alwaysgetbetter.com Twitter: HawkWilson Location: Ottawa, ON /* THANKS */ Seth Godin: http://www.sethgodin.com Steve Pavlina: http://www.stevepavlina.com Phil Haack: http://haacked.com /* SITE */ Last Update: Jan 14, 2012 Standards: HTML5, CSS3 Software: WordPress
In most cases, you would want to include at least a TEAM and SITE section. Clearly the exact fields are left to your imagination, but it’s a very simple way to acknowledge the people who helps (directly or in spirit) a site to get to fruition.
For more information about humans.txt, check out the initiative’s home page at http://humanstxt.org/.
Tags: attribution, HTML