I fix poisoned websites and recover lost rankings — fast and surgically.
✓ Trusted by global businesses, offering expert SEO, cybersecurity, and engineering solutions to protect and enhance your online presence.
Here’s what I do:
I find the root cause, clean the poison, and help your site regain its authority in Google. With deep knowledge of SEO, web security, and code infrastructure, I fix what others can’t even see.
• Identify & patch security gaps
• Cloaking, injection, redirect fixes
• Permanent protection for SEO assets
“Arash didn’t just fix our SEO problem. He exposed the root cause and made us secure.”
“After wasting money with 3 agencies, we finally found someone who knows what he’s doing.”
“Saved our domain reputation in less than two weeks.”
SEO poisoning is a form of malicious attack that manipulates your website’s content, links, or visibility in search engines — often without your knowledge. The goal? To exploit your authority and rankings for spam, redirects, or affiliate fraud.
Cloaked spam pages (visible only to Google)
Hidden keyword injections (pharma, porn, gambling terms)
Redirect hacks (sending users to unrelated or dangerous sites)
Toxic backlinks or negative SEO campaigns
Injected sitemaps or fake URLs indexed by Google
JavaScript-based obfuscation for hidden content
.htaccess manipulation or backdoor scripts
Fake schema or markup spam
These attacks result in:
Ranking drops across your most valuable keywords
Decreased visibility in Google, Bing, and other search engines
Manual penalties, deindexing, or flagging in Google Search Console
Loss of trust from real users who see suspicious search snippets
Revenue loss from organic traffic decline
Every website is a target — but especially:
WordPress sites with outdated plugins or themes
WooCommerce stores with high organic traffic
Joomla, Drupal, Magento, or Shopify platforms
SaaS platforms, marketplaces, and eCommerce businesses
Affiliate sites and blogs monetized through SEO
Agencies managing multiple client websites
Hosting providers or site owners with shared hosting
✅ Full SEO Attack Audit
– Backlink spam scan
– Malware or script-based cloaking
– Sitemap injection analysis
– GSC error and penalty checks
– Keyword ranking anomaly detection
✅ Cloaked Page Removal
– Identify and remove pages only visible to search engines
– Clean or block hidden iframes, base64, eval scripts
– Rebuild clean sitemaps and URL structures
✅ Hidden Keyword Injection Fix
– Search across HTML, PHP, JS, and DB for hidden spam
– Clean CSS tricks (e.g., display:none, left:-9999px)
– Eliminate junk keywords from site code and database
✅ Redirect & Backdoor Cleanup
– Remove .htaccess and JavaScript redirection hacks
– Fix server-side cloaking targeting Googlebot, Baidu, etc.
– Patch common CMS vulnerabilities and backdoor entries
✅ Google Recovery Support
– Manual action removal and reconsideration request
– Disavow toxic backlinks and negative SEO links
– Rebuild trust with Google’s ranking algorithm
✅ CMS-Agnostic Support
We support ALL platforms:
WordPress
Joomla
Drupal
Magento
PrestaShop
Shopify
Laravel
Custom-coded websites
Node.js / React / Angular SPAs
Static site generators (Jekyll, Hugo, etc.)
In late 2022, around 15,000 WordPress websites were compromised in a widespread redirect attack used for SEO poisoning (redirecting to fake Q&A forums). Source
That campaign injected ~20,000 malicious files per site, mainly targeting PHP for WordPress. Source
April 2023 saw the Bumblebee malware distributed through SEO poisoning and malicious ads targeting corporate users (e.g., trojanized Zoom or ChatGPT installers). Source
In January 2023, the Blender‑3D SEO poisoning attack used clone sites (blender-s.org, blenders.org) to redirect logical software download seekers to malware installers. Source
Between Dec 2022 – Feb 2023, healthcare organizations—especially in the US and Australia—faced a rising number of SEO poisoning attacks distributing malware (via Gootkit/VLC exploits). Source
A large-scale attack in late 2022 involved poisoning over 144,000 malicious NuGet, PyPI & NPM packages, each linking back to phishing/scam websites via SEO manipulation. Source
ReliaQuest reported a 10% monthly increase in SEO‑poisoning-related malware detections from August 2023 to January 2024, totaling a 60% increase over six months. Source
Malwarebytes flagged a 41–42% month-over-month surge in malvertising (ads in search results leading to malware) in fall 2023. Source