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Google Search Removes 'Mobile-Friendly' Label, Will Tackle Interstitials Next (venturebeat.com) 79

An anonymous reader quotes a report from VentureBeat: Google today announced two updates to mobile search results: an aesthetic one rolling out now and an algorithmic one coming next year. The former consists of removing the "mobile-friendly" label in search results and the latter will punish mobile sites that use interstitials. The goal is to "make finding content easier for users," though as always, the company didn't share exactly how much of an impact users and webmasters can expect. The report adds: "If your site is in the 15 percent group, here's a quick recap. A webpage is considered 'mobile friendly' if it meets the following criteria, as detected in real time by Googlebot: Avoids software that is not common on mobile devices, like Flash; Uses text that is readable without zooming; Sizes content to the screen so users don't have to scroll horizontally or zoom; Places links far enough apart so that the correct one can be easily tapped. The company now wants to tackle 'intrusive interstitials' as they 'provide a poorer experience to users than other pages where content is immediately accessible.' After January 10, 2017, pages where content is not easily accessible when coming from mobile search results 'may not rank as highly.' Interstitials that Google doesn't like include showing a popup that covers the main content (immediately or delayed), displaying a standalone interstitial that the user has to dismiss before accessing the main content, and using a layout where the above-the-fold portion is similar to a standalone interstitial but the original content is inlined underneath. Interstitials that Google deems OK include legal obligations (cookie usage or for age verification), login dialogs on sites where content is not publicly indexable, and banners that use a reasonable amount of screen space and are easily dismissible."
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Google Search Removes 'Mobile-Friendly' Label, Will Tackle Interstitials Next

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  • Mobile Web (Score:3, Insightful)

    by sexconker ( 1179573 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @06:29PM (#52759261)

    My phone has a large enough screen and a high enough resolution that I just prefer to browse the full site. Can we stop the "mobile web" shit?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      As long as you buy everyone a phone that's large enough for them.

    • Agreed.

      But then our phones would probably explode under the pressure of fullscreen autostarating flash ads.

      That and embedded java applets, fully interactive canvas elements, and millions of cross site activity trace pings.

      Throw in some android specific attacks, and some other kinds of fun we don't know about yet, and it could be loads more entertaining to browse on a mobile device.

      (I can hardly wait for the aggressive AR adverts of the near future.)

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I despise the "mobile web" for the same reason you do. Also importantly, I LIKE being able to scroll horizontally and zoom. Almost every mobile site disables these core features. Almost none have an opt-out. Those that do require a manual reload or an account.

      Personally, I'd like a browser in the app store that just always lies and is indistinguishable from a desktop browser. It's pretty much the only way this will ever work anyway- web developers are so relentlessly hostile that they ignore settings a

    • by Anonymous Coward

      As a webmaster, it's not that big of a deal to make a website using proper modern HTML mobile compatible. It's a matter of replacing the HTML tables(that we had to use last decade to keep our sites Internet Explorer 6 compatible) with CSS tables, and having a special mobile-friendly CSS file for people on mobile browsers. It took me about a day the last time I had to convert a desktop site so that it was mobile friendly; my new designs just have a second mobile CSS file.

      • by jrumney ( 197329 )
        CSS tables? I'm guessing you mean inline-block elements, which are great for layout, but they aren't tables.
    • Re:Mobile Web (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @08:10PM (#52759703)
      The irony is that the way Tim Berners-Lee designed the web, the web server was to send you a minimally-structured set of information to display, and it would be up to the client to format it in the best way for the local display. This meant things like font sizes, page flow, in-line photos, etc. should adhere to settings on the browser.

      The designers and page layout artists were horrified at this, and did everything in their power to subvert this model and return control of how the site would appear back with themselves. That's why flash websites were so popular in the early 2000s - it gave them complete control of how the site would appear, giving the user none. Gradually they've figured out ways to take away control from the user using regular html, which is why you now have websites where you can't zoom, can't resize fonts, everything is locked to three columns (menu, text, ads) which you can't move, resize, or rearrange, etc.

      The way Tim Berners-Lee envisioned the web, there would be no need for a desktop site or a mobile site. You just create one site, and it's up to the visitor's browser to format it in a way which makes it most usable on the display device. The need for different desktop and mobile sites only arises if you design your site so that it will only operate at a certain resolution or screen size.
      • The web still is "configurable by the user and browser". The problem is on mobile all the browsers are a locked down POS that you aren't allowed to do anything with.
      • The way Tim Berners-Lee envisioned the web

        Is representative of the rest of the 80s and early 90s. We don't do anything the same anymore when it comes to design, layout, UI, or human machine interactions. The approach of not limiting a page to a specific display was ultimately quite limiting, so the web evolved.

        The need for different desktop and mobile sites only arises if you design your site so that it will only operate at a certain resolution or screen size.

        No. The need for different desktop and mobile sites arises out of ensuring the best kind of interaction between your user and your device without putting yourself into an incredibly limiting scenario involving serving up text and letting the

      • It wasn't just designers. Ad companies like Google were big culprits in subverting this vision. If your content is delivered in a structured form, then it's trivial for the receiver to just not display the bits that are adverts. On the other hand, if you get a big glob of executable code that produces some output then it's a lot harder to identify which bits are real content and which are cruft.
    • My eyes aren't great and my fingers are fat, can we please have text readable at approximately the same apparent size and links that have reasonable bounding boxes across all devices?

      • please have text readable at approximately the same apparent size and links that have reasonable bounding boxes across all devices?

        No, because the browser on your device does not adhere to any known standards (unless by accident), and the standards do not agree on how big "12 points" is on a mobile screen.

    • by gilgongo ( 57446 )

      As a (former) employee of one of, if not the biggest, news websites in the world, I can tell you their publisher said almost exactly the same thing. Mobile optimised tends to mean at best "laid out a bit differently" and at worst "crippled".

    • by jrumney ( 197329 )

      My phone has a large enough screen and a high enough resolution that I just prefer to browse the full site. Can we stop the "mobile web" shit?

      Mostly this is because sites (m.slashdot.org, and groups.google.com are the two that immediately spring to mind) cripple their mobile sites to the point where they are unusable (no "mark all as read" in groups.google.com, difficult to quote parent, javascript which actively works against editing your reply, and a login that only logs you in to half the site among other problems on m.slashdot.org)

    • by nathana ( 2525 ) *

      My phone has a large enough screen and a high enough resolution that I just prefer to browse the full site. Can we stop the "mobile web" shit?

      Yes. Can all of it, starting with Slashdot's own mobile site.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I've seen plenty of desktop-focused sites that return one thing to the googlebot and another to normal browsers. E.g, they present a page to google that contains MySearchTerm, yet this does not appear on the page returned to browsers. Or sometimes the content they claim to have is hidden behind a login page, yet the googlebot still points to the page for that term.

    What's to stop them from doing the same with interstitials? Pretend to anything coming from google's IP ranges that there are none, yet have t

  • Lemme guess ... Google's own ad sales don't provide for interstitial ads.
    • Re:Market Power (Score:5, Interesting)

      by quenda ( 644621 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @07:54PM (#52759629)

      Google appears to be applying the rule to themselves.
      The worst "interstitials" to me are the YouTube ads ("skip in 5 seconds"),

      So by this policy, you can avoid the youtube ads by finding the video in Google search!
      I just tried a whole bunch of video searches, and it goes straight to the video with no advert. But click another clip within youtube ...

      Sorry if this is not news :)

  • It's about time Google did something about those full screen popups which pop up every time you go to some webpage, usually asking for your email address. It's annoying to start reading something and being interrupted by a popup which covers the entire page.

    As an aside, I find Google's ads have become annoying enough I recently removed them from my pages [samiam.org], despite the minor financial hit. When a webmaster asked for text-only ads, Google used to give you only text; now they give you pictures and sometimes eve

    • It's about time Google did something about those full screen popups which pop up every time you go to some webpage

      You mean, like that shit from consent.google.com with the parent page whitened out with blocked scroll even if the consent thingy is prevented by a request policy?

  • the info the browser provides would handle that, so when someone is using a website and their browser says this is an android device with a screen resolution of #x# that phones & tablets use the website should automatically serve up mobile optimized web pages, and when the browser said this is a Linux or windows device with an even bigger screen resolution of #x# that most laptops and desktop PCs have then the server should serve up laptop/desktop optimized web pages,
  • "Congratulations! You have won a free iPad!" survey full page bullshit.

  • Isn't it Google that powers the "answer this survey question to gain access to this news article" thing? I swear I remember seeing their logo on it.

  • On the web, interstitials are web pages displayed before or after an expected content page, often to display advertisements or confirm the user's age (prior to showing age-restricted material). Most interstitial advertisements are delivered by an ad server. - wikipedia [wikipedia.org]

    Everyone but advertisers would prefer if sites with lame adverts before the content were punished. I hope to see this feature added to DuckDuckGo.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by FudRucker ( 866063 )
      I do want to punish advertisers, i want them to be stuffed in the trunk of a car and driven out to Death Valley Desert and abandoned to walk to the next civiliztion, and while they are gone all their computers completely destroyed, right after their credit cards is maxed out by identity thieves, i hate advertising bitterly, they stick their shit in everything, radio, TV, billboards on the sides of the road, billboards all over town, now finally the internet has been able to give the advertisers a little bit
  • by penguinoid ( 724646 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @08:58PM (#52759897) Homepage Journal

    punish mobile sites that use interstitials.

    Those ads, they're not Google's ads. They need to die.

  • A good start... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rickb928 ( 945187 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @10:39PM (#52760181) Homepage Journal

    Next up:

    - Demoting sites that prompt you to install 'their mobile app'. This is just their desperate plea to get even more data from you. And given what Google and that desktop site gathers already, that's a pretty impressive feat.

    - Demote sites that pop a notification request. I don't even know you, website, and you want into my circle of trust? Huh?

    - And can we get an amen for punishing sites that pop up Android Virus/Malware Detected, Battery and Memory Optimizer, and any other free and fraudulent apps?

    And with that, half the web dies. So sad.

    • Don't forget the auto-redirects to some lame game in the Play store. I clicked on your link to read your news article. Not to install a game.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I wish they would just allow uBlock. You can run a version of AdBlock, but it's limited.

  • by knorthern knight ( 513660 ) on Wednesday August 24, 2016 @12:18AM (#52760463)

    Puh-h-h-lease...

    Stop playing games trying to identify the user agent and sending to different pages,. Mozilla has gone off the deep end, and there are multiple forks of Firefox (I use Pale Moon). Many idiot webmasters try to match user-agent to one of the "big 3 or 4". If the match fails, they assume it's some weird mobile browser, and force even desktop browsers to the mobile site. If I specify "bad.example.com/", I want the desktop version, not the mobile version.

    If you absolutely insist on doubling your workload, go ahead and create a separate "m.bad.example.com/", but please don't try to force users to it, because it probably sucks. A couple of "obligatory" cartoons for you...
    http://chainsawsuit.com/comic/... [chainsawsuit.com]
    https://xkcd.com/869/ [xkcd.com]

  • The report adds: "If your site is in the 15 percent group

    What 15% group? If you're going to chop out paragraphs from an article, at least make sure they make sense by themselves.

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