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Article• January 29, 2026
Why a Domain Can Get Banned
If your domain suddenly loses traffic or users start complaining about "red screens," the cause usually comes down to one of three areas: content, technical setup, or reputation.
What's Actually on the Domain
Filters look at what visitors actually see, not your intentions. Malicious scripts, phishing forms disguised as other brands, auto-downloading files, aggressive push notifications, endless popups — all of this dramatically increases your chances of getting blocked by both search engines and antivirus software.
Technical Side
Even with relatively clean content, a domain can get flagged because of its environment. Sharing an IP with spammers, cheap hosting packed with dozens of shady neighbors, long and obscure redirect chains — filters treat all of this as a sign that someone's trying to hide something or dodge moderation.
User Complaints
Feedback is a separate issue: browser reports, complaints from ad platforms, copyright holder takedown requests. Even a technically clean site can end up with risk labels if it racks up enough complaints over time.
Niche
Gambling, betting, adult content, crypto, and other gray-area industries operate under heightened scrutiny. It only takes a small mistake in your setup or creatives to get your domain throttled.