Kernel indexing permissions for special content
Content Reuse
Kernels that are created from reused content will honor the destination page permissions. This will affect the Lock / Unlock status of Source Articles used to create a generative response as follows:
|
Source page Privacy |
Destination page Privacy |
Lock / Unlock for Source page |
Lock / Unlock for Destination page |
|
Private |
Public |
Lock |
Unlock |
|
Semi-Private |
Public |
Lock |
Unlock |
|
Semi-Public |
Public |
Unlock |
Unlock |
|
Public |
Public |
Unlock |
Unlock |
|
Public |
Private |
Unlock |
Lock |
|
Public |
Semi-Private |
Unlock |
Lock |
|
Public |
Semi-Public |
Unlock |
Unlock |
Content Reuse and the llm-no-index tag
The llm-no-index tag does not cascade to pages that contain Content Reuse. This means that only the page that has the llm-no-index tag will not be indexed, and you will have to apply the tag to destination pages.
Use the Content Reuse audit report to identify pages that need to be tagged.
|
llm-no-index on source page |
llm-no index on destination page |
Source indexed? |
Destination indexed? |
|
Yes |
No |
No |
Yes |
|
No |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
|
Yes |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
No |
No |
Yes |
Yes |
Conditional Content
Conditional Content is indexed, and returned based on user permissions. For example, content within blocks for Anonymous users can be returned for Anonymous users performing a generative search. Other user types performing a search will not see conditional content that they are not usually permissioned to see.
How Conditional Content and Page Privacy affect the lock icon
Regarding the lock icon next to generative response Source Articles, indexing Conditional Content respects the page privacy page. This means that the privacy of the conditional content block is ignored.
|
Source page Privacy |
Conditional Content on page? |
Lock / Unlock for Source page |
|
Private |
Yes |
Lock |
|
Private |
No |
Lock |
|
Semi-Private |
Yes |
Lock |
|
Semi-Private |
No |
Lock |
|
Semi-Public |
Yes |
Unlock |
|
Semi-Public |
No |
Unlock |
|
Public |
Yes |
Unlock |
|
Public |
No |
Unlock |
Attachments and the llm-no-index tag
The llm-no-index tag also applies to embedded media on your articles. This means that if the tag is applied to the source page, .doc/.docx and .pdf attachments will not be indexed. Other attachment types will not be indexed, regardless of whether or not the tag is applied to the page.
|
Attachment type |
llm-no-index on Source page |
Indexed? |
|
.doc, .docx |
Yes |
No |
|
.doc, .docx |
No |
Yes |
|
|
Yes |
No |
|
|
No |
Yes |
|
Any other file type |
Yes or No |
No |

