A hyperlink which does not work, for example because the target file is missing, has been moved, or has no public read permission
A clickable HTML link on a Web page that's not working and either returns a page not found, or a page with missing data, such as individual broken image links.
the target page of the link has been deleted or moved; disliked by search engines, always check any link from your pages is and remains live.
a hyperlink that returns an incorrect page or no page at all
a link that either does not have a destination (goes to the main page of Jarkey) or content on the page is not working correctly or is not even showing up
a sign of an unprofessional website
a temporary problem with a link, such as when a remote computer host is down for maintenance
a link that no longer takes a user to where it originally pointed. Usual trigger for this is deletion or renaming of a target page. Cloaking – serving a page to a search engine spider other that the one visitors would normally see. Cloaking is considered a violation of Terms of Service and is a solid reason to get banned from major Search Engines.
A hyperlink which no longer works when "clicked on" or whichdoes not take you to the destination it was supposed to. This can occur for severalreasons: the server hosting the website is temporarily unavailable (for upgrading ortechnical problems), the website has moved or the HTML code for the hyperlink isincorrect.
(Dead Link) - No longer functioning link due to the designated page having been renamed, moved or deleted from the server.
A wiki link (created [[like this]]) for which the article has not yet been created. These links appear in red text.
Is a link that does not work. There a several reasons for broken links: the web server has shut down temporarily; the web server has been reset; the web site has moved; the file has moved; or the HTML code is wrong.
A link that does not work either because of a mistake in the HTML or because the page it links to no-longer exists.
This is a link on a website that is not functioning properly. A broken link is also referred to as a Dead Link. Return Top
A reference to a resource that cannot be located because the URL is not valid, the resource the link points to doesn't exist, or the server containing the resource is busy or is having other technical difficulties.
link that no longer takes the user to the destination page when it is clicked on. This is usually the result of the destination page having been renamed or deleted from the server. Also referred to as a Dead Link.
Also used: edit link, red link. A link to a nonexistent page, usually colored red. [[Template:]] may display this way depending onyour settings. Links may also appear broken due to a bug in templates which causes links incorporating parameters to be treated as if their target does not exist,regardless of whether it does: :Glossary.
A hyperlink that does not work, usually because the URL is incorrect or the Web page to which the link refers has been moved or deleted.
A hyperlink connection to another Web page which no longer works. Web pages are often moved or erased and links to these pages sometimes do not reflect this change. A broken link is a dead end which no longer opens the page to which it refers.
The URL no longer connects to an active site. It's like a phone number that has been disconnected.
It is link within the website which could not be followed. It is also calle dead link.
A hyperlink that does not work due to incorrectly written code or an expired destination.
A hypertext link that doesn't lead to the desired document, perhaps because the document has moved to a new address or no longer exists.
"Broken Link" is an episode ofStar Trek: Deep Space Nine, the final episode of the fourth season.