This is unlikely, because in order to do this, Google would have to crawl every page of the site within three days to find the “noindex” tag. Search Console is of no help in this regard, because its data is always outdated and may never change until the change is fixed.
Even looking back now, we see that Search Console only received a maximum of 249 affected pages, out of over 8,000 indexed pages. Considering that our search volume dropped by a third a full week after the incident was resolved, this is impossible.
Note: I could never determine exactly how many pages were portugal mobile database completely de-indexed in Google, but what I do know is that every page had the "no index" tag, and I vaguely remember searching Google for "site:braftonom" and seeing about one eighth of our pages indexed.
Recovery Plan
Step 1: Solve the problem
Once the issue was discovered, our developers rolled back the update and pushed the site live as it was before the “noindex” tag. Then it was a matter of re-indexing our content.
Step 2: Re-segment your site as quickly as possible
I deleted the old sitemap, built a new one, and re-uploaded it to search console. I also crawled most of our core product landing pages and manually requested a re-index which I don't think did anything since the recent SC update.