There are some interesting referral statistics embedded in this piece. Facebook referral traffic has fallen more than 40% over the last year; referrals from Reddit have increased by 88%. #Media https://werd.io/2024/google-discover-is-sending-us-news-publishers-much-more-traffic
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Ben Werdmuller (ben@werd.social)'s status on Thursday, 26-Sep-2024 01:25:14 JST Ben Werdmuller -
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Eugen Rochko (gargron@mastodon.social)'s status on Thursday, 26-Sep-2024 01:25:16 JST Eugen Rochko @ben @ricmac Even if we didn't set Referrer-Policy deliberately, a lot of our activity happens in native mobile apps that wouldn't send a Referer header anyway. And even if we got it all working, you'd have no way to group it all under "fediverse", it'd just be thousands of individual domains... I don't see what we can do here.
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Richard MacManus (ricmac@mastodon.social)'s status on Thursday, 26-Sep-2024 01:25:32 JST Richard MacManus @ben It's remarkable what a force Google Discover has become, while Google search slowly shrinks for many publishers. One theory I like is that Google is throwing publishers a bone with Discover traffic, while they take away search traffic via AI Overviews. But as the Niemen article notes, Discover is much more of a black box algorithm — there are few ways to optimize for it. And yes, social drives no traffic these days; all the main centralized platforms de-emphasize links now.
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Ben Werdmuller (ben@werd.social)'s status on Thursday, 26-Sep-2024 01:25:32 JST Ben Werdmuller @ricmac And even the open social platforms often strip referrers and utm tags, so nobody knows how if traffic comes from there. (Still Mastodon's biggest own-goal imo.)
I agree re: Discover counterbalancing search. It's such a shift towards the curated and sanitized, alongside the black box nature of it. I don't think it'll end well.
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