1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one synced 2024-12-18 06:42:10 +00:00
seirdy.one/content/notes/cnet-didnt-have-to-delete-old-articles.md

20 lines
1.4 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

2023-08-15 16:22:31 +00:00
---
title: "CNET didnt have to delete old articles"
date: 2023-08-15T09:22:31-07:00
replyURI: "https://gizmodo.com/cnet-deletes-thousands-old-articles-google-search-seo-1850721475"
replyTitle: "CNET Deletes Thousands of Old Articles to Game Google Search"
replyType: "NewsArticle"
replyAuthor: "Gizmodo"
replyAuthorType: "NewsMediaOrganization"
replyAuthorURI: "https://gizmodo.com/"
2023-08-15 16:27:46 +00:00
syndicatedCopies:
- title: 'The Fediverse'
url: 'https://pleroma.envs.net/notice/AYlCIhRRPwoFEDB0dM'
- title: 'The Mojeek Discourse'
url: 'https://community.mojeek.com/t/cnet-didn-t-have-to-delete-old-articles/703'
2023-08-15 16:22:31 +00:00
---
CNET actually didn't have to delete old articles to improve ranking. If CNET simply removed those articles from its sitemap, used [WebSub](https://www.w3.org/TR/websub/) to inform Google (and IndexNow to inform Bing, Seznam, and Yandex) of new higher-priority pages, and maybe used `robots.txt` to disallow crawling of stale pages: CNET could keep old content but prioritize the crawling of recent content. Nothing I just described is Google-specific; these are all agreed-upon standards that work across several search engines.
I suppose it's easier to just delete pages, though. Less labor means fewer expenses. After all, this is the outlet that [cut costs with algorithmically-generated articles](https://gizmodo.com/cnet-ai-chatgpt-tech-news-1850017739).