104 comments

  • mtnGoat a day ago

    I've been invited so two similar events over the past couple decades and one company I worked for had standing weekly meetings with Google. All I can say is my experience is pretty much they same, they lure you in wanting info and to help you, but don't give any answers and just keep wanting more info. In the end they didn't unblock us and in my opinion built a lot of what we shared into their systems. It was a knowledge theft exercise in my opinion, was NOT in any way meant to help anyone but Google.

    • mountainb 20 hours ago

      When I handled a lot of ad spending for numerous companies, Google would schedule continuous meetings with junior sales people dedicated to figuring out which client relationships that they could interfere with to convince me to spend more money recklessly. This is a common experience in that particular industry with Google's salespeople in particular.

      What's interesting about that is that if any of the (dozens? over a hundred?) salespeople that I interacted with could have provided a solid rationale for what they were suggesting in the context of what a particular client wanted to achieve, I could have been persuaded. None of them ever did at any time. It was always just a one-sided appeal to spend more money with no coherent plan for a return on spending.

    • mtnGoat a day ago

      in fact the standing weekly meetings were cancelled after we got to the point where the entire half hour was consumed with going over all the AIs their end had they we were still waiting for answers on. Since we never got any, we cancelled the meetings as wasteful.

    • DidYaWipe a day ago

      This article doesn't give any specifics on the "shadow-banning." I am totally willing to believe in any douchebaggery anyone reports from Google, but I (as anyone should) require specifics to give any credence to the writer's claims.

      This "article" fails to answer the first questions you'd have. For example, how did Google single you out for this invitation? The article asserts that it was all "shadow-banned" site owners, but then says the Google employee denied all shadow-banning. So how was the invitation phrased?

      I'm not even going to waste time breaking down the rest of the empty bullshit in this article. It's unfortunate, because I'll bet every claim made against Google is true. But I'm not going to give a single one credence without specifics. If you're too lazy to provide those, you don't deserve support.

      • verzali a day ago

        From a quick search it seems you get invited to these things by filling in a feedback form for Google.

        As for shadowbanning, well, it doesn't take much to remember Google is a search platform and then to match that with his complaints about his site getting deranked.

        Maybe that could have been made clearer, but surely if I could figure that out you could too.

        • DidYaWipe a day ago

          Nobody should be expected to run around doing searches to support the assertions in a random article. Why would you serve as an unpaid tool?

          Anybody on here can speculate as to what Google does to this or that Web site; but if you're going to write an article claiming it as fact, you need to support it.

          It's a bummer that your time is free.

          • meiraleal 19 hours ago

            Your time seems to be free as well as engaging to demand "proof" wastes as much time. But yours is way more wasted as you created only a HN comment, not a proper blog article.

            • DidYaWipe 8 hours ago

              Create a blog post to respond to an apologist for unsupported, fact-impoverished writing?

              That's a whole other level of time-devaluation.

            • upghost 18 hours ago

              last two comments mentioned it... is "your time is free" a new pejorative for "loser" or something?

      • CogitoCogito a day ago

        You could maybe consider directing these questions to the author of the article? Given the context, I'm sure he'd appreciate the feedback.

        • DidYaWipe a day ago

          It's not uncommon for the authors of articles posted here to come to the comment forum.

          • sanderjd 3 hours ago

            Or for someone with similar experiences to describe what's really going on.

  • smsm42 2 hours ago

    Two things I don't get here.

    First: if I am not happy with my site's placement in google (I don't care, but if I did), and I complain, nobody would even acknowledge my existence. I have no idea how I could even talk to a live human working for Google. People who get invited to "conversation" are obviously very special. In what way? What did they do to deserve that?

    Second: certain people built their business on certain aspects of behavior of certain technology that does not belong to them and they have zero control over. These aspects changed, and their business is suffering. I understand their frustration. But why do they expect that the technology owner would do anything to help them? They aren't their paying clients. The technology owner's interests are in no way aligned with theirs. Why do they think anything would be done?

    Oh, and also - why do they think anything can be done? I mean Google's codebase by now is decades of code stacked on top of older code. Probably nobody even knows how all of it works. I mean some people probably know how some parts work, but overall likely nobody knows why the ranking is such and not other. And each change shuffles things around and some pages go up and some go down. Why should anybody in Google prioritize the complaints of those who went down, and even if they did - it only would result in replacing one group of complainers with a similar group of complainers with identical complaints. It is obvious that there's no perfect ranking that would satisfy everyone, and likely at the complexity it is every change leads to unpredictable chain of rearrangements. Googlers can politely listen to those who got unlucky but they likely can't promise them anything more than that.

  • Animats a day ago

    "It was then I realized this wasn’t our funeral, it was Google’s."

    What Google seems to be doing is banning aggregation sites. There was a previous posting today by someone who was complaining about low ranking for his book review and link farm site. Google wants to be the only aggregator. Why fan out queries to another level of aggregator?

    A list of the 20 sites he's talking about would help. How many of those are aggregation sites?

    • palmfacehn 16 hours ago

      HN and Reddit, two aggregator sites, are outranking the original article

      https://x.com/joshtyler/status/1851872361420853690

      I was able to reproduce the SERPs with this query

      >I attended google's creator conversation event

      When I removed the "client" parameter to post the link here, the original post ranked higher. However, that's really neither here nor there. Reddit is consistently cited as outranking original content.

      Personally, I've learned not to cry about sites that don't rank. My time is better spent building new sites. Sometimes de-ranked sites come back in subsequent updates. Not everything sticks on the first try. You have to be persistent if you want to profit from organic traffic.

      My impression is that these creators have one-trick ponies they have deeply invested themselves into. They may not be good at creating new ideas. Expectations of fairness are misplaced. You have to roll with the punches. Dwelling on what they think Google "should be" is a waste of time. Highly recommend focusing on areas within your immediate control. Individual agency is empowering. Victimhood, not so much.

    • sanderjd a day ago

      The whole article is pretty confusing to me. It's never made at all clear what this event was supposed to be about or why this specific set of people were there. Presumably it wasn't "invite people who run 'shadowbanned' sites" when they don't acknowledge that there is such a thing. So what was it, then?

      • DidYaWipe a day ago

        It's not confusing; it's totally unsupported bullshit.

        The author claims that a bunch of "shadow-banned" site owners were invited to some summit, but couldn't be bothered to say how this invitation was phrased or delivered. How were the recipients identified, especially when he says the Google person claimed that no such sites existed?

        This whole thing is an insulting waste of time.

        • pvaldes 20 hours ago

          > How this invitation was phrased or delivered

          This is irrelevant for the theme. Some could came in a plane and other in a car, but who cares? Is assumed that either they were invited or wouldn't had walked on the building and asked about how improve google for hours. I assume that Google has some level of check-in security at least.

          > claimed that no such sites existed?

          claimed that they weren't shadowbanned, that is a different thing. And they were said that only some pages were affected. This means implicitly that google was aware that the webs existed.

          • DidYaWipe 8 hours ago

            Irrelevant? HOW? It's central to the entire topic. The guy claims that shadow-banned people were singled out and invited to participate in this thing. Given that Google denied their existence, how did Google phrase the invitation?

            "Hi! You've been invited to join a select group of people we totally didn't shadow-ban, to discuss the shadow-banning that didn't happen. We look forward to seeing you and getting your input on not being shadow-banned!"

          • nailer 19 hours ago

            It’s irrelevant because reaching out to shadow banned companies does not seem like a rational thing for Google to do and and while we may dislike Google they do at least seem rational.

            I initially read this article with sympathy, but something isn’t adding up

            • DidYaWipe 8 hours ago

              I think you meant it's relevant.

              And that's exactly the point: How do you invite "shadow-banned" site owners specifically, without stating why or how this select group has been identified (and denying that anyone's shadow-banned)? This is an obvious question that's ignored by the article.

      • bdjsiqoocwk a day ago

        > Presumably it wasn't "invite people who run 'shadowbanned' sites" when they don't acknowledge that there is such a thing. So what was it, then?

        Answer: it WAS to invite people who run shadowbanned sites, they just don't acknowledge that there is such a thing.

        • sanderjd 10 hours ago

          I'm gonna need more information here...

          It WAS to invite shadowbanned sites that they don't acknowledge exist ... why? Is there some other euphemism that they use to describe these sites, and that would make some sense as a group of people to give special attention to?

        • DidYaWipe a day ago

          Which makes no sense. How did they phrase the invitation, then?

          The writer is too lazy to say.

          • toofy 20 hours ago

            A few years ago, a guy went super viral with a video of himself getting punched outside of a bar. He cried nonstop and went on the typical outrage media tour. Over and over declaring how unfair it all was “These people attacked me because I wore a hat! They attacked me because the color of my hat!”

            It seemed super suspicious from the jump, I kept asking myself, “There has to be more to this story, this guy is being incredibly vague, is there more to this?”

            A couple days after his media circus tour, videos from other people started popping up. these videos told us a little bit more. video after video of this guy—for hours—trying to start fights with dozens of people. multiple videos of him complaining while getting ejected from various bars by bouncers. he spent like 6 hours at many, many bars provoking and then feigned shock when it happened. “my hat. every time i go to this particular city, they physically beat me because they don’t like my hat” … ya left a little bit of important context out eh friend?

            this blog post feels very similar to me as that guys initial video. something is missing.

            • DidYaWipe 8 hours ago

              Yep. But someone is coming here to downvote those who raise these simple questions... hm.

  • danpalmer a day ago

    > took place on October 29

    > The day before, he led the group on a tour

    > The building was empty

    Monday, October 28th, was a work from home day.

  • pikseladam 18 hours ago

    I visited this website, and Chrome ended up blocking around 2,500 third-party cookies. Websites like this should face consequences for such behavior—it’s like dealing with a live malware site.

    • cowboylowrez 16 hours ago

      yeah the website was so uniquely bad, I couldn't continue to read with firefox. links worked ok tho.

  • oraphalous a day ago

    The whole world seems dedicated to the goal of extracting value rather than creating it.

    • throwaway48476 a day ago

      Or tricking someone else into creating value for you to take.

      • akira2501 a day ago

        People tend to create value inherently. If they are not receiving the benefit of that then it would most appropriately be described as theft with the aid of blind regulators.

    • WalterBright a day ago

      Anything you get for free, that requires someone else to work to provide it, means you're going to pay for it one way or another.

      • lesostep 21 hours ago

        It could be true for things that could only be "used" once. But I don't think that it's a valid point at all times. Recently, for example, I've made a little "Linux for dummies" zine, and put it on my shelf. Sometimes guests take it, read it, and put it back. Technically, all of them get to read it for free, through no additional cost to me, because this zine already existed before they knew they wanted to "use it", and this zine will continue to exist after they "use it".

        • WalterBright 13 hours ago

          Do you let random people use your car for free, too? Do you pay for their gas as well?

      • thaumasiotes a day ago

        Sure, if it doesn't exist before you order it.

        If it's already been made, someone may even pay you to take it away.

    • metadat a day ago

      Welcome to capitalism. It's a tough realization.

      • pvaldes 21 hours ago

        Capitalism and thief are different things. We should stop using the first to justify the last. If this people was lured to work for free, this is not capitalism.

      • smsm42 a day ago

        I'm sure that the glorious Communist Party would build a google where every site is equal in ranking and always occupies the first page.

        • metadat 10 hours ago

          Not making any claims or value judgments about other economic structures. I wanted to point out that the value extraction aspect of capitalism is fundamentally cold blooded / soulless / impersonal.

          • smsm42 2 hours ago

            As opposed to value extraction under socialism, also known as "GULAG", "down to countryside", "killing fields", "reeducation camps" and "transitory labor regime". The most prominent feature of all those is how kind, warm blooded, soulful and personable they are. Literally everybody who was there (and came out alive, which wasn't easy) makes sure to point that out.

      • WalterBright a day ago

        It's a free country. You're free to implement a search engine and let anyone use it for free.

        Good luck paying for it, though.

        • rurban a day ago

          So we need to persuade the NSA to finance our new search engine? Or should we turn to Putin or Xi? The European surveillance services would not be able to

          • WalterBright a day ago

            You still have to pay the NSA, in the form of taxes.

        • stavros a day ago

          This is kind of disingenuous when the grandparent comment is complaining exactly about the particular way this country is free in.

          • WalterBright a day ago

            Not at all. If someone wants to fund a charity search engine, they can do it.

            No matter how you structure it, somebody is going to have to pay for it.

            Another way of saying it is there's no such thing as a free lunch. In any society, any where, any time.

            You might as well wish for an antigravity machine :-)

            • Straw 9 hours ago

              I agree with your sentiment, however its not exactly true.

              According to his son, Milton Friedman used to say this but stopped because he realized that trade itself is free lunch- because its a win on both sides- consumer and producer surplus. He replaced it with "always look a gift horse in the mouth".

            • stavros a day ago

              Depending on who pays, the incentives are different. In a socialist society, where some things are funded by the government, those things are generally much more aligned with the interest of the public than in capitalism, where most money wins.

              • s1artibartfast 19 hours ago

                Man, those Cambodians really loved the killing fields. You should have seen how excited they were

              • WalterBright 13 hours ago

                > In a socialist society, where some things are funded by the government, those things are generally much more aligned with the interest of the public than in capitalism

                Just for fun, compare the Soviet built Lada cars with cars built by capitalists. Or the contents of supermarkets. Or the quality of health care.

                Oh, and the advice given to American tourists visiting the Soviet Union - pack a couple pairs of blue jeans, as they are great for trading for stuff!

                I'll make it easy - name any consumer product made by the Soviet Union that was preferable to one built by greedy capitalists. Did you wonder why the US did not import Soviet made consumer products?

                • stavros 12 hours ago

                  I meant more like Germany, countries with strong social safety nets and regulation, rather than full-blown communism.

                  • WalterBright 11 hours ago

                    Socialism results in less productivity. Even in Germany.

                    • stavros 11 hours ago

                      This is like a fish saying "living on land results in breathing less water". Yes, that's the point, but the fish almost can't imagine how that might be a good thing.

    • mmaunder a day ago

      You're surrounded by and typing on valuable goods and services that you received in exchange for a store of value called money, which you received by providing value to someone else.

      • a day ago
        [deleted]
  • encoderer a day ago

    > page has 22 ads

    > calls chief search scientist “elderly”

    > concludes google is dying

    Author if you’re reading this the answer lies within.

    • PawgerZ 14 hours ago

      First suggested "Trending" article:

      Diddy Party Planner Reveals Freak Off Requirements

      Yeah, I'm thinking you're right.

  • mensetmanusman a day ago

    Will google ever recover the culture, or did management kill it?

    Maybe that’s the purpose of our economic system? No inefficient fun?

    • musicale a day ago

      What seems to happen is that after there is an initial surplus of value or benefit in any business - perhaps some of it going to customers, some of it going to service users, some of it going to employees, etc. - eventually someone in charge identifies and implements a way to tap that benefit and turn it into money that is absorbed by the company.

      And with a monopoly, some of the surplus simply vanishes as deadweight loss.

      Google makes nearly $500K in profit (out of $1.6M in revenue) per employee. It seems possible that they could potentially bring back some of the old work environment, or maybe even reduce overall encrapification, but there is little incentive to do so.

    • DANmode a day ago

      Google is not simply a moneymaking tool.

      You're missing a(t least one) piece of the puzzle.

      • DANmode 11 minutes ago

        (I meant for their owners!)

      • musicale a day ago

        I'd like to think so. If Google didn't provide some useful goods (Pixel phones) or services (Google Cloud) then it would be a purely financial company.

        • nine_k a day ago

          For a ton of people, the ads Google sells are very useful. The ads make their products visible. It's weird (do you often click on ads?) but the effect exists, some customers do come this way. Businesses, big and small, readily buy ads.

          This is what powers their empire, not selling phones or even GCE. Search is but a delivery vehicle of ads, maybe one of the most powerful but not the only one.

          (Disclaimer: I don't buy or sell ads, and run an ad blocker in my browsers.)

          • WalterBright a day ago

            I don't think I've ever clicked on a banner ad. I don't even see them, as my brain just treats them as a featureless background.

            • BrandoElFollito a day ago

              This is what I noticed to when I had to disable the ad blocker on some sites.

              The ads are annoying because they break the reading flow (I think it is called parallax when the ad moves with your scrolling, but slower - I hate that).

              My brain just compensates to keep z smooth reading peace but I have no idea what the ad is about.

  • Apocryphon a day ago

    What exactly are these websites, why do their webmasters have a special relationship as "Google Web Creators," and how is it so many of them were coincidentally shadowbanned? This article is interesting about the state of Google as seen by a visit to the campus and at a dismal event, but I still don't have a clear idea who the people let down by Google are.

  • cowboylowrez 16 hours ago

    Google should play fair but if its not required by law I can understand if they don't, if there are business benefits to being unfair and no requirement to be fair, why would Google change?

  • pzo a day ago

    Google business model is mostly ads (~80% revenue) and majority of their ads are from google search (~60% of revenue). This allowed them to subsidise many other projects in the past.

    These days they have a lot of competition in ads scene (meta, tiktok, x, reddit, amazon) and also other are gunning at google search: perplexity, searchGPT, bing. Apple choosing OpenAI for Apple Intelligence. Amazon teaming with Anthropic for Alexa. On top of that antitrust in EU and USA.

    That's the reason google is killing lots of projects or loosing on many fronts these days or they aggressively try to monetise other projects (Youtube, Manifest V3.0). If they don't win in this AI race or diversify revenue/business model enshitification will continue.

    • red-iron-pine 11 hours ago

      the enshitification will continue regardless, because stock prices need to go up and they will eventually run out of runway.

      in theory, winning the AI race gives them more runway, but we've hit the limit of LLMs and there is a lot of hope that some magical Gen-AI daddy will come in and fix everything. even if they get there, will it be profitable compared to competitors? and for how long?

  • wpietri a day ago

    Wow, this is impressively brutal. I don't know anything about search or ranking these days, but the way insist on putting an AI summary at the top of every page definitely is good evidence for the theory that Google doesn't give a damn about the people doing all the actual work that makes a search engine valuable.

    • forgetfulness a day ago

      They must be planning on milking what value can be had from the web to which they used to be the entryway, and clash with OpenAI, MS and Apple over AI trained on curated datasets, to layer some semblance of a business model over it. And I say milking because the relationship to websites is now parasitic for the most part.

    • nine_k a day ago

      I started using Google search like ChatGPT, for asking questions and reading the AI responses. In many simple cases, it suffices.

      As an actual search engine, Google search is still not bad, but now one of the many, without a large edge it used to have; I try it when DDG does not bring results I want, or I query DDG when Google does not bring results I want.

      • __rito__ a day ago

        If you are doing this, I suggest giving the Perplexity app a try. It's very fast, convenient, and accurate. It was Perplexity, and not ChatGPT that reduced my Google usage.

    • CamelCaseName a day ago

      I'm not really sure what option Google has. It's do or die.

    • wrycoder a day ago

      Same for Amazon reviews.

  • CamelCaseName a day ago

    > It was then I realized this wasn’t our funeral, it was Google’s.

    Yeah, this is a nice thought, but Google is still a ~$3T business and probably will be for at least the next decade or two.

    There's no karma or justice in the world, only cutthroat businessmen. And Google hires as many of those as they can.

    • WalterBright a day ago

      > There's no karma or justice in the world

      Life isn't fair, nature isn't fair, nothing made by man is fair.

      The best we've got is providing people with freedom. And cutthroat businessmen have provided all the luxuries and food you have.

  • dare944 a day ago

    "Empty too, was the rest of Google’s behemoth campus. Their numerous buildings are surrounded by beautiful, park-like pathways with no one to enjoy them but the groundskeepers. They follow the paths with their lawnmowers, weaving between softly shaded employee parking lots, with no one to park in them."

    Without comment on the rest of the article, I can personally confirm that this particular statement is disinformation. I was there, in person, at the Google Mountain View campus, on October 29, 2024 visiting as a representative of an external partner (and as a long ago former employee). I did not attend this event, but I was nearby the entire day. Throughout the day the building I was in was very busy, with many people coming and going and working at desks. At lunchtime, we walked to the Google cafe a few buildings away which was brimming with people, to the point where our group of three struggled to find a table to eat at.

    Of course there may have been buildings on campus which were empty or sparsely utilized. But the area I was in (western end of Charleston Rd) was anything but empty. In the future, the author should try to stick to the truth when making their point.

    • isaacfrond a day ago

      You need to read better: The day before, he led the group on a tour of Google’s biggest office

      So that would be October 28. Apparently, the office was closed that day. As the author was there on 29 as well, it’s still pretty misleading though.

  • iamnotsure a day ago

    Google procures to poison guests with dead animals and alcohol.

  • a day ago
    [deleted]
  • oglop 12 hours ago

    Feel bad for the author. This was clearly an information pump. They just wanted info from them. That’s it. Of course google lies. Of course they steal. It’s Google and it’s not 2007 anymore. Don’t trust them. Don’t engage with them. They just steal and harvest from others. They couldn’t even keep a simple chat app running. It’s a trash company filled with trash people who will talk down their nose at you while destroying the fabric of society. Pretty par for the course these days for anything tech though. I work in tech and can say we are awful, vampiric, and pretty much useless people who get off on having power over people through knowledge. If you approach most software engineers with that understanding they are much easier to deal with, but that doesn’t make them and the industry any less parasitic. I hate my career choices.

  • neilv a day ago

    I don't know how accurate this writeup is, but the characterization of behavior was eerily familiar.

    If they'd been talking about a certain other place that I know, I would've wanted to shout "Exactly!", and would've implicitly believed that's what they saw.

    There's a type who exhibits a combination of arrogance and self-interested fixation. There's no malice, and they aren't sociopaths, and they don't think of themselves as jerks. But they have a sense of superiority and entitlement, and can be aggressively, er, norms-bending, to get what they want.

    Some environments seem to either attract them, or to nurture them. It's something unclear to me about the individual environment, not the external kind of organization (e.g., one high-prestige organization has a lot of it, but another high-prestige organization of the same kind doesn't).

    I could attribute it to "culture", because I don't have any more specific theory, and play by ear how to try to filter or nurture it out of a collective. But I suspect there's a critical mass of that type gaining positions of influence in the organization, at which point the culture becomes irreversible, since there's too much arrogance to see it as a problem. At that point, I'd guess the rest of the people should be looking at their options for leaving, and also try not to think or behave like that type themselves.

  • slowhadoken a day ago

    Lmfao

  • synack a day ago

    Maybe don’t put ads between every paragraph on your blog.

    • quuxplusone a day ago

      The site also disables the back button (on mobile Chrome).

      I have no idea why the site owner thinks their site was downranked (and the article never says: it assumes some context I lack), but I cynically wonder if it's related to the back-button and video-ad thing.

      Edited to add: This article here provides some information about the meeting/roundtable thing described in TFA. https://www.seroundtable.com/google-creator-summit-38196.htm...

      • CamelCaseName a day ago

        I haven't read your linked article, but it's crystal clear when you get downranked.

        One day your analytics show you're getting less and less traffic from Google, while other sources remain constant. What else could be the reason?

    • Terr_ a day ago

      Even for the most ad-crappified site, I think the objection to a mysterious and opaque system is still valid, especially when it's arguably a monopoly or close enough not to matter.

      In other words, I'm not saying their site deserves to be shown, but in general people do deserve a way to see why their site is in a weird status and have some documented path to redemption.

      _________________

      Quoting the relevant bits for convenience:

      > Undeterred, we then asked the only question that mattered: Why has Google shadowbanned our sites? [...] He insisted it is only done at the page level.

      > Many of the shadowbanned site owners attempted to politely push back and point out that the reason all 20 of us were there was specifically because our entire site was deranked from Google in a single night. [...]

      > When asked what was wrong with our sites, as if we were jilted lovers in an abusive relationship being kicked to the curb, one Googler actually said “it’s not you it’s me”.

      > Finally, someone bluntly asked, since nothing is wrong with our sites, how do we recover?

      > Google’s elderly Chief Search Scientist answered, without an ounce of pity or concern, that there would be updates but he didn’t know when they’d happen or what they’d do. Further questions on the subject were met with indifference as if he didn’t understand why we cared.

      • ytoawwhra92 a day ago

        > deserve a way to see why their site is in a weird status

        Like this? https://developers.google.com/search/updates/core-updates

        > have some documented path to redemption

        Like this? https://developers.google.com/search/docs/fundamentals/creat...

        • Terr_ a day ago

          As it says, they were desperate enough to travel in-person to Google headquarters to attend an event during weekday work-hours. That kind of effort usually means other avenues have been explored and exhausted.

          Are you saying site-owner is just incredibly dumb, and never noticed/tried those online resources despite being highly motivated to do so? Or is it that you think they found a useful answer they didn't like, and are lying?

          • ytoawwhra92 6 hours ago

            I think if the site owner did an honest self-assessment of their content (as suggested on the "Creating helpful, reliable, people-first content" page I linked) the problems with their content would be as obvious to them as they are to me.

            I won't speculate about why they attended this event despite running a site filled with content that's at odds with Google's published recommendations for ranking well.

    • infecto a day ago

      I could not read the whole thing or even get the gist of the parent site. Looks like one of those late 2000s content farm sites filled but chum box ads. Low quality all around.

    • iandanforth a day ago

      Not that this invalidates your comment, but why do you put yourself through ads? Block them.

    • a day ago
      [deleted]
    • generalpf a day ago

      I was reading this on my iPhone 11 Pro and my phone was turning warm in my hand. My music kept stopping and starting again. Eventually I had to kill the browser.

      I am sorry this is happening to the authors. Maybe it’s related to the scumminess of their blog, maybe it isn’t.

      • surgical_fire 20 hours ago

        I read it on my OnePlus Nord using Firefox with an adblocker.

        I experienced none of what you did.

        Maybe you should try a decent browser on a decent phone.

        • 6 hours ago
          [deleted]
    • stefan_ a day ago

      This is exactly the kind of trash spam site I want Google to ban. Maybe thats why this writer had such a gloomy feeling.

  • mmaunder a day ago

    [flagged]

    • Terr_ a day ago

      > It's spam

      For what product? Or do you mean there are simply too many submissions?

      > Ads overlayed on ads overlayed on ads.

      That's a fair critique, but does it merit flagging?

      If "too many ads spoils the reading experience" is a cause for flagging content that would otherwise have some merit, then we should also be flagging all the submissions to otherwise-aboveboard news sites which happen to have pay/subscribe walls.

      I'm not entirely against that in theory, but AFAIK that's not where the informal bar is set right now.

  • bdjsiqoocwk a day ago

    I'm telling you, many google employees are in a cult. They deny evidence in full confidence because thats what they're told say their work place.

  • seethedeaduu a day ago
    • meiraleal 19 hours ago

      I hope one day HN will evolve to stop being a nest of (x/g)ooglers downvoting anything against google. This cancer of a company and culture must go