

Why are you linking to reddit?
Why are you linking to reddit?
I didn’t see what exactly they’re using for a Teams replacement?
How are you labeling users?
/r/declineintocensorship and /r/watchredditdie served that purpose more so.
we can get random experts chiming in about interesting topics in an organic way
There’s a github issue requesting this feature.
I haven’t observed that on Lemmy or Mastodon.
deleted by creator
What do you use instead?
They’re not images, they’re articles. You have to click on the link to read the article. @Blaze@feddit.org
I think that has to do with your cookies. Your first one, I see wikipedia at #2, then jstor, then another site, then amazon again. There’s a lemmy.world post at #7.
You know a lot about the fediverse right? Do you know what the deal is with the crossposting feature? https://sh.itjust.works/post/26060607/14239219
SEO ranking is relative. IE: if reddit and lemmy have the same post title, the reddit one will show up higher since it has a higher domain authority.
I think this is also the main reason why youtube videos show up as top search results instead of the same video on youtube-alternative sites.
I think your previous question was clearer, so I’ll just link to it: https://sh.itjust.works/post/25867272/14197383
My response:
I’m no SEO expert, but search engines penalize websites for gaming the system. I’ve already read someone suggest that Google is not sure what to do with the fediverse because it already looks like spam, and that may be why it doesn’t show up often in search results. That’s beyond my knowledge though.
I’m no SEO expert, but search engines penalize websites for gaming the system. I’ve already read some suggestions that Google is not sure what to do with the fediverse because it already looks like spam, and that may be why it doesn’t show up often in search results. That’s beyond my knowledge.
It reminds me of people who added Invidious links back in the day, but over time the individious instances would go down, preventing people from knowing which content was initially linked.
Yes, the archive.today links have that risk, but not the archive.org ones. Also, you can manually modify archive.today links to show the original link.
With the way this seems to works, can’t we just create thousands of links to let’s say Lemmy.world from all the other instances, to boost the LW domain authority? Shouldn’t all the crossposts links be taken into account in this calculation?
That might be one reason lemmy.world has a relatively high domain authority.
And if yes, then do 3 links here really make a difference?
Your 3 links won’t make a difference. Starting a trend and spreading the word will.
Well you still have the direct links, so it doesn’t make a difference.
You can use the Wayback machine addon to easily get archived links https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/wayback-machine_new/.
And a bookmarklet for archive.today:
javascript:void(open('https://archive.today/?run=1&url='+encodeURIComponent(document.location)))
Linking directly to reddit makes them show up at the top of search results. You should use archive.org or archive.today links.
CanvasBlocker addon.