Bot intelligence record

SeekrBot

Review first

Use the SeekrBot identifier to separate Seekr search indexing or content discovery traffic from normal visitor requests in server logs.

Search Indexing Verified Bot Confidence: Medium Verified: Yes robots.txt: Yes
Operator
Seekr
Family
Seekr
Type
Search
Source type
Verified Directory
Last checked
2026-05-20

User-Agent Pattern

Seekr
SeekrBot
Verification note

User-agent strings are identification signals, not proof of identity. Confirm important allow, block, or rate-limit decisions with logs, DNS or IP evidence, request behavior, or operator documentation when available.

Robots.txt Snippet

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User-agent: SeekrBot Disallow: /

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Handling Guidance

Depends

Use this record as bot intelligence, then verify the request source and behavior before allowing, blocking, or rate limiting.

Search indexing, content discovery, rendering, or search-result freshness checks.

Record Details

Structured data
Operator
Seekr
Family
Seekr
Type
Search
Purpose
Indexing
Identity type
Verified Bot
Confidence
Medium
Last verified
2026-04-29
Last checked
2026-05-20
Source type
Verified Directory
Verification
Compare the observed user-agent against the documented SeekrBot pattern. Where available, confirm with operator documentation, published IP ranges, reverse DNS, signed-agent metadata, or published operator documentation, reverse DNS, published IP ranges, signatures, or other trust signals.
Spoofing risk
User-agent strings can be spoofed. For allow-listing or low-friction rules, pair the published identifier with operator documentation or reverse DNS/IP verification when available.

Notes

SeekrBot is listed in the Botcrawl directory as a search crawler from Seekr. The primary identifier for log review is SeekrBot.

Identification

  • User-agent pattern: SeekrBot
  • Family: Seekr
  • Type: Search
  • Kind: Crawler

Common use

Search indexing, content discovery, rendering, or search-result freshness checks.

Verification and handling

Confirm the user-agent against server logs and use published operator documentation, IP ranges, reverse DNS, or other trust signals when available.

Directory guidance marks the risk level as Neutral and the blocking decision as Depends. Do not rely on the user-agent string alone because user-agent strings can be copied or spoofed.

Robots.txt handling: Yes.

Evidence and Source

  • Compare the observed user-agent against the documented SeekrBot pattern. Where available, confirm with operator documentation, published IP ranges, reverse DNS, signed-agent metadata, or published operator documentation, reverse DNS, published IP ranges, signatures, or other trust signals.
  • Match `SeekrBot` as a case-insensitive substring in HTTP user-agent logs. Review bot_aliases for alternate names or product labels. Do not treat a user-agent match alone as proof of identity for allow-listing.
  • Search indexing, content discovery, rendering, or search-result freshness checks.
  • User-agent strings can be spoofed. For allow-listing or low-friction rules, pair the published identifier with operator documentation or reverse DNS/IP verification when available.

WordPress Bot Protection

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