Categories: Entertainment

BBC pushes its new iPlayer Radio site, blocks Google from indexing current site

It looks like the BBC has started the process of migrating users away from its current on demand Radio website towards its new one; having blocked search engines from accessing the current iPlayer Radio website using its robots.txt file.

But don’t worry; it’s not the end of BBC Radio online.

The BBC’s robots.txt file, which the company uses to tell search engines what pages they can and can’t index, was updated in the last 24 hours to prevent sites like Google and Bing from accessing the current iPlayer Radio site.

BBC’s current robots file

BBC’s cached robots file, from December 30 2012

So, why the change? In October 2012 the BBC released the first version of its upgraded online radio offering; this new offering included a smartphone app, more content for the site, and a brand new radio website.  The reason for the change, according to the corporation, was that users don’t consume radio content in the same way they consume TV content.

The BBC says that users who come to its iPlayer site tend to consume video/TV content on demand but listen to radio content live.

Describing the change as a “deliberately bold move to radical simplicity” the BBC says that the new site has been designed to address this differences in consumption habits and to make it easier for users to listen live radio content while still having access to on demand audio content.

And it seems to be working, according to the corporation the new site, since October, has broken the corporation’s records for online listening.

“BBC iPlayer Radio across all platforms now reaches around 6 million UK unique browsers per week, breaking all previous records, which is 30% up compared to October 2011. We are seeing a significant increase (almost one fifth, 18%) in traffic to the product homepage, which receives over a million unique browsers per week, and which in turn is sending higher numbers of people to the individual station sites: Radio 2 saw a 31% increase between September and November, whilst Radio 4 saw a 9% increase.”

So it’s no wonder that they’re eager to move users away from the current site towards the new one.

And they’re moving fast, the removal of the old iPlayer from Google and Bing search results seems to have happened already – a search on Google only returns one result (for a beta BBC Radio site), while a search for the new site returns about 433,000 results.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Recent Posts

Shift left, ship fast: How software teams can offer speed without sacrificing quality (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Even the biggest software companies understand that moving quickly is no longer a luxury; it's…

8 hours ago

Extremists weaponize COVID, climate issues with conspiracy theories about state & elite control: RAND Europe

The RAND Europe authors are so stuck in their own echo chamber they don't realize…

4 days ago

Digital ID, vaccine passports are expanding to pets & livestock: UN AI for Good report

Humans, animals & commodities alike are all to be digitally tagged, tracked-and-traced equally: perspective The…

1 week ago

Teaching with tech: What’s changing and why It Matters (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Teaching has changed a lot over the years, from chalkboards to laptops, from printed worksheets…

1 week ago

‘Enormously intrusive’ collaborative sensing is beneficial to society: WEF podcast

The massive city-wide surveillance that collaborative sensing requires is a tremendous temptation for tyrants: perspective…

2 weeks ago

AI set to transform Product Development Lifecycle with new software engineering workbench

Innovation in software can lay claim to the very solutions that today have become the…

2 weeks ago