Thursday, 28 May 2020

Appeals court rules in favor of Google, Apple, Facebook and Twitter in anti-conservative bias suit

The same day Donald Trump took to Twitter to threaten to regulate or shut down social media sites, the U.S. appeals court in Washington, D.C. dismissed a lawsuit accusing top tech companies of silencing conservative voices. Filed in 2018 by nonprofit Freedom Watch and right-wing gadfly Laura Loomer, the suit accused Apple, Facebook, Twitter and Google of stifling First Amendment rights.

The suit alleged that four of tech’s biggest names “have engaged in a conspiracy to intentionally and willfully suppress politically conservative content.” It specifically cited Loomer’s ban from Twitter and Facebook, following a tweet about Congresswoman Ilhan Omar. Also noted is her inability to grow an audience base and revenue on Google’s YouTube, suggesting that after Trump’s election “growth on these platforms has come to a complete halt, and its audience base and revenue generated has either plateaued or diminished.” Apple’s alleged role is less clear.

In the ruling, District Judge Trevor McFadden notes that Freedom Watch and Loomer failed to back up a claim that the companies were “state actors,” involved with the regulation of free speech.

“The Plaintiffs do not show how the Platforms’ alleged conduct may fairly be treated as actions taken by the government itself,” the judge writes. “Facebook and Twitter, for example, are private businesses that do not become ‘state actors’ based solely on the provision of their social media networks to the public.”

In other words, the companies cannot violate the first amendment, because banning users doesn’t constitute government abridgment of free speech. Per the decision, “Freedom Watch fails to point to additional facts indicating that these Platforms are engaged in state action and thus fails to state a viable First Amendment claim.”

The post Appeals court rules in favor of Google, Apple, Facebook and Twitter in anti-conservative bias suit appeared first on AdInfusion.



source https://www.adinfusion.com/appeals-court-rules-in-favor-of-google-apple-facebook-and-twitter-in-anti-conservative-bias-suit/

Tuesday, 5 May 2020

Google May 2020 Core Update – FAQs within SERPs NERFED

In a Twitter post earlier, the Google Search Liaison Twitter account announced that Google will be releasing a broad core algorithm update. Hours later, they announced that the update is now live and it will take a few weeks for it to roll out in all of their data centers.

Since the update will take a couple days to finish completely rolling out in Google’s data centers, it is tough determining the felt effects of it and it might take a week or more to gather some data related to the update. The past few days were pretty stable but we do expect to see some fluctuations in the next few days due to the update.

SEMrush Sensor

SEMrush Sensor

Volatility on SEMRush sensor has been pretty calm lately so you can’t infer much from that.

What has Google changed?

So the first thing I noticed this evening when I was checking some local SERPS was something I had grown kind of accustomed to seeing was missing: all the FAQ schema boxes attached to SERPS everyone’s been abusing are gone! Google nerfed FAQ schema!

OK but what is a nerf?

If you’re unaware – to “nerf” something means when developers reduce something’s ‘power’ or effectiveness within a video game. Often times this is to solve some problem in a video game (such as an ‘overpowered’ weapon/ability or super effective strategy), or to push the players in one direction or another (such as a new cosmetic/item/character).

Nerfs affect the ‘meta’ or prevailing strategy/characters/items used to win the game. In this way nerfs also give control to the developer of how the players play the game. i.e. nerfing a commonly used item to discourage the community from playing with it.

This originated wayback in the online gaming world of Ultima Online.

At one point in the game, the developers reduced the power of swords in melee combat.

This resulted in players complaining that it was like they were hitting each other with nerf bats, not swords.

From then on, if ever something gets made less worth while than it had been originally, it is considered ‘nerfed’

If you have been living under a rock these past few months, you might have missed everyone adding a list of FAQs and some FAQ schema markup to their pages which pretty consistently was rewarding you with a nice box of FAQs that showed up in the SERPS. This was a pretty dirty trick I shared a couple months ago that often times let you knock a competitor off the front page. For some niches it was getting pretty ridiculous,  seeing 2-3 different sites for the same query displaying all the FAQs was significantly lowering the amount of results shown.

It was pretty crazy how easy it was to knock someone off the front page – so I’m not surprised to see this get nerfed. From Google’s perspective, I’d guess they are dialing this back to improve the quality of search engine results pages.

How does this change affect us?

In our case, as SEO’s – how does this effect the meta? Well the silver lining is that I think this will actually lead to an improvement in CTR – sometimes implementing this schema would mean people would just get information from the FAQ dropdown and never even visit the site, i.e.  zero click searches. For those of us who do SEO for businesses that was hardly ever a good thing because we want to drive traffic to our site.

Personally I’m going to leave most of the FAQs on the pages where I put them because its a great way to beef up the amount of content on a page, and it’s also useful information for the visitors. #itwasgoodwhileitlasted

The post Google May 2020 Core Update – FAQs within SERPs NERFED appeared first on AdInfusion.



source https://www.adinfusion.com/google-may-2020-core-update-faq-schema-nerfed/

Monday, 4 May 2020

Google Confirms May 2020 Core Algorithm Update Rolling Out Today – May 4th

Google’s Danny Sullivan has confirmed that a core algorithm update is rolling out today – May 4, 2020.

The update will officially be known as the “May 2020 Core Update.”

He followed up a few hours later to announce it was going live, and that it will take some time to roll out.

The post Google Confirms May 2020 Core Algorithm Update Rolling Out Today – May 4th appeared first on AdInfusion.



source https://www.adinfusion.com/google-confirms-may-2020-core-algorithm-update-rolling-out-today-may-4th/