Google just announced "GoogleOther," a new web crawler intended to relieve Googlebot, the company's primary search index crawler, of some of the load.
Several Google product teams will utilize a general web crawler called GoogleOther to collect publicly accessible content from websites.
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The new GoogleOther crawler's main goal is to replace Googlebot's present non-essential functions.
Research and development (R&D) crawl and other tasks that are not directly linked to search indexing will be handled by GoogleOther in the meantime.
To control GoogleOther's access and crawling behaviour on your website, update your robots.txt file to include specific rules for GoogleOther as needed.
To understand how often GoogleOther crawls your website and which pages it visits, regularly review your server logs and analyze the requests made by GoogleOther.
Observe any changes in crawl frequency, crawl budget, or the number of indexed pages by monitoring crawl stats in Google Search Console since the introduction of GoogleOther.
To identify any potential issues caused by GoogleOther's crawling activities, regularly monitor your website's performance metrics, such as load times, bounce rates, and user engagement, and look for any correlations.