Tedium - Detecting Parasites 🪲

A newsletter publisher takes on parasite SEO.

Hunting for the end of the long tail • December 31, 2024

Detecting Parasites

Our year-end award for best blog post goes to a niche website known for its air purifier reviews. But the post reached way beyond its traditional audience—and may have helped change the way Google operates.

So, before we get started, I have to talk about something. I decided to do a really bold thing and it ended up screwing up my writing schedule. But I had a good reason for it. The good news is that it’s (mostly) done and the thing is good to go.

That thing is the most ambitious redesign of Tedium in its decade-long history, one that does a lot of crazy things. The front page (for desktop users) is a massive interactive mosaic with hundreds of clickable issues. On top of that, we have an article shuffle mode, so you can get lost in the site really easily.

So this is a thing we built. It is how we roll.

This kind of blew up our annual posting schedule, and I’m sorry about that. But we will post our year-end thing soon.

But since I have you, I just wanted to say one thing: Thanks. It’s our tenth anniversary. We have been doing this for ten freaking years. I’m not sure how we did it either.

Anyway, let’s talk about our favorite blog post of 2024.

A good blog post is not hard to find. But sometimes, it stands out.

As you might have heard, we have thought a lot about the way Google is breaking the internet, and we’ve even created some tooling to call it out.

But I think the conversation didn’t start with AI-generated slop, and it won’t end there. Rather, it comes down to motives and how search engines are using their deep influence on our culture to create perverse incentives.

A couple months before I stumbled upon udm14, the air-purifier review site HouseFresh decided to call out a practice that was actively threatening the future of sites like theirs. The husband-and-wife team of Gisele Navarro and Danny Ashton, who run HouseFresh as a part of NeoMam Studios, had seen their site’s fortunes drop precipitously in the span of only a few months, despite their approach clearly being in the spirit of how SEO is supposed to work.

“We know that at the end of the day, Google will reward us if our readers find our articles useful,” they wrote in a piece titled “How Google is killing independent sites like ours.”

How is Google doing the murder? Here’s a top-level explainer: Recently, large publishers with big brand names and prominent domains, like Rolling Stone and Forbes, have taken to publishing content that essentially got the end-results of what a site like HouseFresh does (make recommendations based on research, bring in affiliate revenue) without doing any of the work. And this has allowed large companies—or platforms with prominent user-generated content, like Reddit—to essentially overtake Google search results.

Imagine doing all this work only for a massive site that is just having interns or AI spit out lists of popular Amazon items beat you on Google.

Which sucks if you’re putting in the work, as Navarro and Ashton note:

As a team that has dedicated the last few years to testing and reviewing air purifiers, it’s disheartening to see our independent site be outranked by big-name publications that haven’t even bothered to check if a company is bankrupt before telling millions of readers to buy their products.

That isn’t helpful content. Especially considering the work of air purifiers can’t be assessed by the naked eye.

Users won’t be able to tell if their air purifier is actually working without subject-matter knowledge and the help of tools to measure air quality. That’s when actual testing and firsthand data become indispensable.

I had a chance to connect with Navarro in the wake of my udm14 insanity (it still averages more than 100,000 unique visitors per month, more than 5,000 of which stopped by just today), and I feel an appreciation for the challenges that indie sites have. I don’t work in quite the same realm that Ashton, a clearly talented reviewer, does. But I am an independent publisher who has been doing this for a while, and I have a ton of respect for people who are willing to take these kinds of risks, because they are heavy. It is an art to make the challenges of trying to do quality work only for large, lazy publishers to do an “I drink your milkshake” on websites that aren’t trying to dominate the internet.

While HouseFresh doesn’t quite have the presence it once did in search, the team ruffled a lot of feathers and created an outsized impact. Both The Verge and The New Yorker gave this post the attention it deserved. At least one shade of the activity that Navarro and Ashton called out, called “parasite SEO,” was effectively banned by Google about a month ago. And by the end of the year, Forbes was cutting freelance staff as the negative attention their traditional domain overuse had finally caught up to them. While there was reporting along these lines before HouseFresh spoke up, most notably from Futurism, I think their blog post was the thing that tipped the apple cart.

Another post in this genre that I refer to constantly is “We need your email address,” by my pals at 404 Media. It does an excellent job of breaking down why sites like theirs ask for emails and put up regwalls, and how bigger-picture changes to the digital ecosystem are forcing publishers into making difficult choices that may seem consumer unfriendly. They have to do this, because if they don’t, the value will be siphoned.

As Tedium turns 10, I think long and hard about how difficult it is to be an independent publisher on the open internet. We may be trying to own our audience, but the ugly underlying systems are still there, and we must struggle to work around them.

I deeply appreciate that folks like Navarro and Ashton and teams like 404 are speaking up.

Runners-Up

At its moment of peril, democracy needs journalists to be activists. Iconic tech journalist and educator Dan Gillmor has been periodically been sounding the alarm about journalists sticking with Twitter despite all signs showing that it’s a stupid, dangerous idea to do so. His commentary on it usually came in a series of Mastodon posts, but at its heart, it is commentary about the fact that we are not in a status-quo moment, but journalists keep acting like they are. This Medium post very effectively hardens that point.

Why I Confronted Nancy Mace. Evan Greer is known for her tech advocacy as Fight for the Future’s executive director, and generally that is the lane where her work lands. But when she found herself in the same room as Nancy Mace, the South Carolina congresswoman who had created a controversy about trans bathroom access out of whole cloth, Greer used her position to call it out—getting booted out of an event focused on digital policy. She got some hate over it, but as her post notes, she’s looking at the bigger picture: “Are those of us focused on technology and the rules governing it ready to meet the moment?” Based on Project Liberty’s lack of public statement about the incident, the answer is no.

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Congrats to everyone who got picked in this year’s list. (Here’s a link to share.) We’ll be back in your inbox soon with a 2025 look-ahead. Cheers—and be sure to check out the new site!

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