The SEO Framework · KB

★︎ Start with TSF
  • Extensions
  • Documentation
  • Pricing
  1. Home
  2. Knowledge Base
  3. Search Engines
  4. Google
  5. (Archived) Why is “max-image-preview:none” purged?

(Archived) Why is “max-image-preview:none” purged?

Published on November 8, 2019
Revised on June 13, 2020

Update – February 3rd, 2020: This bug has been fixed. You can safely use this directive without side-effects.

Archived: Nothing on this page is applicable since The SEO Framework v4.0.5.


We found that when using the robots directive max-image-preview:none in combination with noarchive or nofollow, Google Search will render the robots meta contents as such:

<meta name="robots" content="none" />

none is equivalent to noindex,nofollow, and that means your page will be removed from Google Search, which is not our intention. The cause of this issue is probably due to a regex bug in Google’s parser. We informed Google via Twitter, but it went unnoticed.

So, from The SEO Framework v4.0.3, when you apply noarchive or nofollow to any page, the max-image-preview:none directive will be purged from it. This change will prevent your pages getting taken off from Google Search unintentionally.

Filed Under: Google, The SEO Framework

Other articles

  • Google

    • All you must know about sitemaps
    • Why aren’t archives listed in the sitemap?
    • Why aren’t my empty categories indexed?
  • The SEO Framework

    • Robots.txt blocks
    • Breadcrumb shortcode
    • Constant reference for The SEO Framework
    • Filter reference for The SEO Framework
    • Common plugin update issues

Commercial

The SEO Framework
Trademark of CyberWire B.V.
Leidse Schouw 2
2408 AE Alphen a/d Rijn
The Netherlands
KvK: 83230076
BTW/VAT: NL862781322B01

Twitter  GitHub

Professional

Pricing
About
Support
Press

Rational

Blog
Privacy Policy
Terms and Conditions
Refund Policy

Practical

Documentation
TSF on WordPress
TSF on GitHub
TSFEM on here
TSFEM on GitHub
Feature Highlights

With love in 2025 › The SEO Framework