Google has made quite a few changes to its search engine in the past few
months, and these include the exclusion of certain authorship data from
search real estate. Ever since then, some people have faced problems
with their sitelinks. Sitelinks are automated links generated from your site, and are seemingly chosen randomly. The algorithm that chooses these 'random' sitelinks is shady at best, and often you do not want certain links to appear.
Google also recently updated a feature that displayed a site search box within sitelinks.
This feature gives webmasters the ability to control how Google handles
searches conducted within the search within this site, in the Google
search results snippet area.
When users search for your company/website by name, e.g. [my blogger
tricks], they may actually be looking for something specific on that
website, for example a contact page or a specific section of the site.
Usually, when Google algorithms recognized this, they'd display a larger
set of sitelinks and an additional search box below that search result,
which let users do site: searches over the site straight from the
results, for example;
This is also known as a site command search. Developers have more
control over how those searches work and if they land on your internal
site search pages or not.
Some users, however, might not like users searching straight from the
search results as it could lower the overall page average per user. So
Google is now letting webmasters disable the feature completely.
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