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Came across this interesting article on Hacker News: We were promised Strong AI, but instead we got metadata analysis (calpaterson.com)
Think this subject has been discussed partly in some other topics here, but this article explains it very well.
Basically the argument is that we've been promised 'strong' AI for years now. AI that, in the case of Google, would simply read a page and know exactly what the purpose of that page is and how that page should rank in the SERPs.
However, Google still relies to this day extremely heavily on metadata, i.e. webmasters telling Google very explicitly what a page is about, who wrote it, and so on.
What makes this relevant to this forum is that the author argues this is a key reason why content sites (like many of us here operate) still rank so highly. Content site owners know very well how to feed Google the right metadata so they rank for the correct queries. Many other people do not know this, and so rank very poorly even if their information is inherently more valuable to Google's users.
The promise of AI is that it will solve this problem, and the AI will on its own identify those valuable pages that do not spoon-feed Google structured metadata. The point being that we should be thankful that the AI is nowhere near as powerful yet as it was promised, or we'd probably have a much harder time ranking.
Think this subject has been discussed partly in some other topics here, but this article explains it very well.
Basically the argument is that we've been promised 'strong' AI for years now. AI that, in the case of Google, would simply read a page and know exactly what the purpose of that page is and how that page should rank in the SERPs.
However, Google still relies to this day extremely heavily on metadata, i.e. webmasters telling Google very explicitly what a page is about, who wrote it, and so on.
What makes this relevant to this forum is that the author argues this is a key reason why content sites (like many of us here operate) still rank so highly. Content site owners know very well how to feed Google the right metadata so they rank for the correct queries. Many other people do not know this, and so rank very poorly even if their information is inherently more valuable to Google's users.
The promise of AI is that it will solve this problem, and the AI will on its own identify those valuable pages that do not spoon-feed Google structured metadata. The point being that we should be thankful that the AI is nowhere near as powerful yet as it was promised, or we'd probably have a much harder time ranking.