Oliver Roick's Weblog Nobody reads this anyway.

The Verge’s Nilay Patel boils down the effects of Google status as the default way to discover information on the Web:

Google’s grand promise was to organize the world’s information, but over the past quarter century, an enormous amount of the world’s information has been organized for Google — to rank in Google results. Almost everything you encounter on the web — every website, every article, every infobox — has been designed in ways that makes them easy for Google to understand. In many cases, the internet has become more parseable by search engines than it is by humans.

The piece is the first in a series of articles commemorating Google’s 25th birthday trying to better understand how Google works to shape the Web.

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