this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2023
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most people i know use google by searching whatever question they have and including the word “reddit” at the end to find reddit threads since it currently has the most useful information.

As Lemmy gets more and more filled with useful threads and reviews it would be great if we can collectively improve Lemmy’s SEO so just including the word lemmy in a search will show lemmy threads related to the search.

The obscure tlds used in lemmy servers don’t help and lemmy.com currently redirects to lemm.ee. Is there a way we can improve the SEO of all instances or have lemmy.com be a aggregator of threads from many Lemmy servers?

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[–] dan@upvote.au 36 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Like, if a web crawler sees a Beehaw post, and then seees Lemmy.ml's mirrored page of that same post, could it just show up as two different results? Could it work against the SEO in that it gets marked as "duplicate" or "spam" content in some way?

The ideal solution is that the page has a canonical tag, telling search engines what the main URL for the content is: https://ahrefs.com/blog/canonical-tags/. I don't know if Lemmy already does this, nor do I know how well canonical tags work cross-domain as I've only ever used them for content on the same domain.

[–] Olissipo@lemmy.pt 21 points 1 year ago (2 children)

The ideal solution is that the page has a canonical tag, telling search engines what the main URL for the content is: https://ahrefs.com/blog/canonical-tags/. I don’t know if Lemmy already does this [...]

I checked and it does, this post's canonical is:

<link data-inferno-helmet="true" rel="canonical" href="https://merv.news/post/26663">

Weirdly it uses OP's instance, in this case merv.news. Shouldn't it be the instance where it was posted?

[–] ClassyHatter@sopuli.xyz 8 points 1 year ago

Canonical tags were added in 0.18.2.

[–] AdmiralRob@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 year ago

I would think it's because users only interact with their own instance. They would need to post it to their instance first before it can be forwarded to the appropriate community's instance.