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The Empire Strikes Back
Google acts fast to smack down spammy, cheap, AI-generated schlock. Is this the fix it desperately needed to stay at the front of the pack? Or is it too late?
by Tod Maffin (LinkedIn • all social media)
Today's News:
SEARCH • Google Hitting Spam Sites Hard (Yay!)
SOCIAL • Engagement Does Not Equal Link Clicks
PAYMENTS • PayPal Rolls Out ‘Tap to Pay on iPhone’
CREATIVE • Adobe Finally Adding GenAI to Express
LINKEDIN: Will Try to Predict Your Next Job
LINKEDIN: ‘Who’s Viewing’ Gets Creepy-Helpful
INSTAGRAM • The Hidden Retro Game Within
META ADS • Temu Spending $2B, But Not Profitable
THREADS • Camera and Draft Is Now Working
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SEARCH • Google Hitting Spam Sites Hard (Yay!)
The big Google update meant to fix a lot of the crappy search results lately has been out for not even a week, and already the company is handing out plenty of yellow flags.
The big anti-spam update rolled out Tuesday. It’s aiming specifically at a few things, notably automated low-effort AI blog posts which has been like 90% of my Google searches in the last six months.
And while the algorithm is hopefully knocking back some of these sites, human beings employed by Google are also manually penalizing the bad ones. This is something Google has always done — they call them Manual Actions.
Indeed, pour one out for this guy…
…who runs a whole army of AI-generated blogs.
This is one of his sites
He uploaded this YouTube video, saying getting clapped by Google has cost him $13,000 in revenue monthly. (What is that they say about tiny violins?)
So the ‘cheap content’ policy and the ‘abuse of expired domains’ policies went into effect this week.
In a couple of months, Google will start enforcing the third leg of the update: ‘Site reputation abuse.’ So maybe soon a glorious end to the trend of major publications being turned into massive cheap affiliate marketing sites.
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SOCIAL • Engagement Does Not Equal Link Clicks
So you’ve got a product you want to sell and have some information up on your web site. What’s a surefire way of getting people to read your product page? The solution, for many years, has been to generate as much engagement on a social media post linking to that page, since high engagement means more people will click to read it.
Right?
Well, not any more — if that even was ever true.
A new report from the p.r. platform Memo has failed to find a connection between how much engagement a post gets on social media vs. how many people actually go on to read that post.
Their study was about news articles, rather than product pages, but certainly there’s similarity.
One finding they confirmed, which shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone — “social engagement was higher per article among negative articles.” (I know, shocker.)
PAYMENTS • PayPal Rolls Out ‘Tap to Pay on iPhone’
More options opening up for small businesses to take payment digitally in-person.
Paypal today announced that “Tap to Pay on iPhone” is now available for all Venmo business profile and PayPal Zettle users in the U.S.
This lets small businesses accept contactless card and digital wallet payments directly on their iPhones with no additional hardware.
Merchants can also set up the system to add taxes, accept tips, send receipts, and issue refunds. Funds from sales will settle into a business's Venmo or PayPal Zettle account.
Buyers do not need a Venmo account to take advantage of this.
For every transaction, PayPal charges a fee of 2.29% plus 9 cents flat.
This comes two years after its competitor Stripe teamed up with Apple as the first payment partner for Tap to Pay. Stripe also offers Tap to Pay on NFC-equipped Android devices. Unlike PayPal's transaction fee, Stripe charges 10 cents per Tap to Pay transaction, with additional fees for card and digital wallet payments.
MORE: for Venmo business profile users and for PayPal Zettle users.
CREATIVE • Adobe Finally Adding GenAI to Express
Adobe will soon bring a huge update to its mobile Express app — its graphic design tool that competes with Canva. That update: Generative AI.
This week, Adobe added AI to the beta versions of their app.
They are definitely playing catchup with Canva, which introduced a whack of AI tools last year.
Once it rolls out more fully, users will get:
a “Text to Image” generator
A “Generative Fill” feature to insert or change an existing image
A new “Text Effects” feature to make text look a bit more interesting.
If you’re a Creative Cloud member, you’ll be able to work on assets from Photoshop and Illustrator.
And the Express app also has some direct publishing tools to social platforms like Instagram and TikTok.
If you want to try it out now, while it’s still in beta, Android users find it in the Google Play store. iOS users need to sign up to get access.
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LINKEDIN: Will Try to Predict Your Next Job
Some interesting additions to LinkedIn’s career tools are launching.
First, something it calls “Next Role Explorer” — this will visualize potential promotions or job title upgrades members could aim for, based on their stated skills and career goals.
As Andrew Hutchinson noted in his coverage of this over at Social Media Today, this isn’t their first whack at such an idea.
Also, somewhat hilariously, Andrew notes that 460 people list themselves as employees of his web site — something which is nowhere near accurate — but they can’t remove those people because LinkedIn doesn’t provide anyway to disavow people, like you can disavow links in Google.
LINKEDIN: ‘Who’s Viewing’ Gets Creepy-Helpful
Speaking of LinkedIn, who among us can say we’ve never checked out that “Who’s Viewing Your Profile” page. It’s pretty basic if you don’t pay for their Premium service, but still just as creepy.
Now, that tool is about to get more helpful. Or, more creepy, depending on your perspective.
Added to the filtering options, like date and company, is a new one called “Interesting Viewers.” It will show you people it thinks can help you get a job, which ones are LinkedIn influencers, which ones work at a company you follow, and a couple of others.
It’s not really at all clear how it’s coming up with these buckets. When I tried filtering for people who could help me get a job, it actually removed HR recruiters from my list. There’s also no clarity on what makes someone qualify as an “influencer.”
Still, a nice upgrade, if your creepy self has this in your daily bookmarks.
INSTAGRAM • The Hidden Retro Game Within
Have you found it yet? Instagram quietly added a secret game to its app which you’ll find in your DMs.
It’s an old-school game like Breakout — you move your finger across the bottom to keep an emoji up in the air. When you miss, the game ends.
To play it, go to your DMs and send someone an emoji. It doesn’t matter which one, just as long as that’s the only thing you send — one single emoji. Then tap on that emoji and you’ll get into the game.
The person you sent that emoji to will indeed see the emoji, without any context, so just heads-up on that.
Two more related items:
I lost after the first screen.
Shut up.
Not everybody has this — it’s not clear if it’s only going to some people, or if it’s just a slow rollout. Instagram wouldn’t say.
META ADS • Temu Spending $2B, But Not Profitable
Temu apparently spent so much money on Meta ads last year that Meta staffers joked that they should literally send them a card.
How much gets you a card from Meta? Temu is said to have spent nearly $2 billion on ads last year.
According to The Wall Street Journal, this makes them Meta’s top advertiser in terms of revenue for 2023.
For its part, Temu denied the figure, but wouldn’t say how much they spent. The company is privately owned by a Chinese holding firm, so it doesn’t have any public reporting obligations.
It is clear, though, that they have deep pockets. The company bought Super Bowl ads this year and last year.
Analysts believe the company is not profitable, with Goldman Sachs estimating its marketing spend alone contributed to an average $7 loss per order last year.
Pivot to enshittification mode in 3…. 2…
THREADS • Camera and Draft Is Now Working
Threads is finally rolling out two of the most requested items on users’ wish lists.
First, if you leave a post without finishing it, you’ll get an option to save that as a draft.
Second, the camera function finally works, so you can upload a photo by taking one right then and there, rather than choosing an existing photo from your gallery.
Both new features are limited, though — for now, you can only store one draft post, and only upload one camera photo per post.
Need more detail?
Read more about the stories we covered today.
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