I recently came across this informative post where (using Claude Opus for data analysis) argues that the lack of engagement and the name "Hive" are the root causes of the network's decline.
There is now a healthy debate currently happening between ,
, and
regarding our identity. One side argues our name is a technical hurdle; another argues our $1M budget is being misspent.
I have no personal opinion about a rebrand or the marketing budget as I only joined Hive two weeks ago at HOD Alicante.
However, I was curious enough to conduct a quick SEO audit of hive.io to see what’s technically going on.
My audit shows that Google doesn’t hate Hive. It literally cannot find us because we’re using a fax machine when people want to slide into our DMs.
A generic name isn't a death sentence. Apple, Amazon, and Virgin proved that.
It’s only a problem when the basic technical foundations are broken and the brand positioning is invisible.
High Authority, Low Visibility (Why we are losing to Solana/Lens)
According to , we are spending $1M a year on marketing yet we are barely ranking in the top 1M sites in the world.
We’re practically invisible for an L1 blockchain.
Key findings:
- We’re getting worse as we dropped by over 200k places in a month.
- People are browsing for an average of only 6 seconds (definitely not reading anything)
- We’re outside the top 500 in the category of crypto / web3.
Hive.io is on Life Support
We can debate "brand awareness" all day, but the data shows that our flagship domain is currently flatlining.
Google doesn't just rank sites based on keywords anymore; it ranks them on User Experience (UX), especially on mobile.
As you can see in the PageSpeed Insights Test below , Hive.io has officially FAILED the Core Web Vitals assessment.
The Vital Signs:
- Interaction to Next Paint (INP) - 251 ms: This is the site's "reflexes." At over 250ms, the site feels sluggish and unresponsive to user input. In 2026, if a site doesn't feel "instant," users (and search engines) move on.
- Time to First Byte (TTFB) - 0.8 s: This is the "pulse." Our server is taking nearly a full second just to acknowledge a request. For a "fast and scalable" blockchain, this is a massive technical contradiction.
- The Verdict: Google's "Mobile-First" algorithm treats a failed assessment like a quarantine. We are spending $1M to drive people to a site that Google is actively trying to hide from the public for their own safety.
I also checked GTMetrix and it really doesn’t look good.
Don’t let the GTMetrix Grade B fool you. While the surface looks presentable, the Total Blocking Time (TBT) is 521ms.
In an era where Google demands under 200ms for a 'Good' rating, we are essentially asking users to wait while the site's engine stalls.
We are failing the very first impression of 'speed' before a single transaction is even made on the blockchain.
Why the Bots Swipe Left (And Never Come Back)
Then, I used my favourite SEO tool, Screaming Frog, to investigate further by crawling the entire site. The results were surprising.
It shows that foundational SEO was not done, as every Title Tag and Description is identical across every page.
Imagine entering a library where every book is called “Hive - The Blockchain & Cryptocurrency for Web3”. Would you bother picking up a book or would you just leave?
It’s no different for the bots. They index one page and leave.
The bigger problem here is that we’re competing for massive keywords: Blockchain, Cryptocurrency and Web3 - against Coinbase, Ethereum and Binance.
We can’t even rank for the word “Hive”.
A Legacy Map from 2020
Remember Lonely Planet? Ever tried to find a restaurant in a plaza that no longer exists, walked around for 30 minutes, only for a local to tell you the map was wrong?
I've been there.
Like a static paper map, our sitemap is a relic from 2020 — the year of the fork — and it hasn't been updated since. The last modified date tells Google nothing has changed.
So Google doesn't bother crawling.
Why would it? If nothing has changed since 2020, there's nothing new to index.
People don't use outdated paper guides anymore. Neither do search engines.
Why Hive is Web3’s Biggest Secret
I’ve attended the EBC, hackathons and Web3 meetups across Europe. Nobody ever mentioned Hive. I actually found it on Meetup - completely by chance (link to intro post).
It is indeed Web3’s biggest secret society. See my search on Brave for "censor resistant blogging" and we are not even mentioned.
Here’s why from Gemini, my SEO assistant for this report:
“My search shows that HIVE Digital Technologies (the NASDAQ-listed miner) is absolutely dominating the "Entity" space. Their press releases and financial filings are correctly optimized for search and AI, which is why Gemini and other agents default to them.
Hive.io doesn't lack a unique name; it lacks Schema. As we found in your crawl, the site doesn't tell Google what it is. If you don't use the SoftwareApplication or Organization schema, search engines have to guess.
The Fax Machine in the Room
Here's the part that surprised me most.
I checked the DOM — the underlying code of the site — and found Universal Analytics tags still running.
Google retired UA in July 2023. Three years ago.
Every visit, every click, every user interaction since then has been going nowhere. We have a $1M annual marketing budget and we're measuring results with a disconnected fax machine.
You can't optimise what you don't measure. And we haven't been measuring anything.
Conclusion
Google doesn't hate Hive.
It literally cannot find us — and now you can see why.
A generic name isn't the problem. Apple, Amazon and Virgin are generic. They won on positioning, consistency and technical foundations.
The good news? Everything I found is fixable. None of this requires a rebrand, a hard fork, or a community vote.
It requires someone to update a sitemap, rewrite some title tags, install GA4, and add schema.
Before we debate what to call ourselves, can we agree to be findable first?