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Type: original post | Authentic: authentic | Importance: important
Topic: Technical SEO optimization and cleanup on decentralized platforms, the impact of short or duplicate content on a website's reputation, and the restructuring of canonical tags in relation to Google's actual indexing criteria.
Tags: #hiveblockchain #ecency #seo #webindexing #googlesearchconsole #digitalstrategy #qualitycontent #webdevelopment3
Claim: To improve search engine ranking, Hive interfaces must stop trying to get Google to record absolutely everything that happens on the blockchain. The real solution is to block the indexing of low-value pages (comments, spam, empty text) and ensure that long, valuable posts have clean, straightforward authoring tags that the algorithm can process immediately.
Stance: support
00:00:00 — Ecency detects a drop in traffic and verifies through data that Google does find its links, but decides to reject them from its index because it considers them to be of low relevance.
Why it matters: From my perspective, what's discussed in this post sets the standard for how Web3 visibility should evolve in the traditional world. If the valuable content that users write on Hive gets trapped in an ecosystem that Google labels as a "spam site or empty comments," the platform will never attract massive audiences from outside. Understanding that SEO isn't solved with tricks, but rather by organizing your own house and showcasing only the best of your blog, is fundamental for content creators' w
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RE: How Ecency is approaching SEO - what we changed, why, and what a sitemap can't fix