this post was submitted on 30 Jul 2023
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Did Reddit get massive because of Digg users making a beeline towards them or were they already big before that?

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[–] mholiv 98 points 1 year ago (5 children)

I think we should prioritize SEO.

If you get a link to a Lemmy post you can’t see the contents nor the comments of the post until you click a further link. Or at least I can’t.

And that means google can’t either.

We need to get to the point where people are adding “Lemmy” to their search posts like they do for Reddit today.

Doing a google search for “best budget backpack Lemmy” should bring up results like “best budget backpack Reddit” does today.

[–] Nurgle 41 points 1 year ago

This isn’t the only answer but it’s a big one. Having both the communities where people can authoritatively answer niche questions and the ability for new people to find those communities/questions is absolutely critical.

[–] decadentrebel 15 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It doesn't help that the thread URLs are some old school "post/4268567".

I also noticed that the markdown format is included (e.g. the hashmarks for headings, asterisks for bold/italics) in search results while every other site doesn't look like that.

[–] kenbw2 11 points 1 year ago

Yea it's a shame the URL isn't

post/5784366/title_formatted_for_url

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago

What do you mean you cant see the comments until you click a further link? What do you see when you click on this https://lemmy.world/post/2383782 i see the post and all the comments?

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I wonder how that'd work though. Like imagine you made a backpack focused Lemmy instance, say backpack.social. How would you get the SEO show up posts under that instance if they add "Lemmy" at the end of the search? It's probably possible, but I dunno how it works or if that would cause problems. Also would we go with Lemmy? Because should kbin posts also show up, or should they just use Lemmy as an SEO tag?

[–] mholiv 9 points 1 year ago

Maybe “fediverse” might be better. All fediverse instances would have the context of fediverse in the scraped data. When someone searches “best budget backpack fediverse” the search engine would show the fediverse instances with the best seo score. Higher quality posts get a letter seo score just as they do today on Reddit. It does not matter which instance the post would be on.

The bigger problem is that search engines can’t even really scrape some parts of the fediverse (like Lemmy) because the default UI does not show any post or comment data.

[–] neblem 2 points 1 year ago

It's not so much the instances but the communities that are important on Lemmy, unlike most of the fediverse. If your community's instance is federated with the big instances, it helps get people to your community either way if the post shows as a link on the bigger instance or the host instance. Hopefully crawlers will eventually add some smarts so we link the host instances eventually too.