Je suis ravi(e) de vous annoncer qu'@awelty_fr recrute !
Nous recherchons un(e) Développeur(se) PHP / Symfony passionné(e) et motivé(e) pour rejoindre notre équipe sur Amiens (80) en CDI dès que possible.
Candidature à agence (at) awelty. com ou via MP.
#Amiens#job
3 days ago @timsoulo posted a list "7 shameless edits" @semrush made to @ahrefs review on Backlinko blog after acquisition.
It got mixed comments, some people seem to see at as a normal business practice and are making excuses for Semrush, even when the FTC state that "connection(s) should be disclosed clearly and conspicuously" and Semrush position themselves as publicly traded US company.
This is not the first time we have mentioned it publicly, and at some point, we kinda expected Semrush representatives to come forward and say something like, you know, "We appologize, misleading people, even inadvertently, is not part of our culture, and we are going to put up a proper disclosure tomorrow."
But as of today, it hasn't happened 🤷🏻♂️
The @semrush account just replied "yep!" to our concerns, and to me it sounds like they're...hm...proud of doing it this way? Not openly disclosing at the top of the post to unsuspecting visitors that this isn't an independent review?
@nickeubanks who is head of "Digital Assets Acquisition @Semrush" (his own business having been recently acquired by Semrush) said "nothing here is out of the ordinary" and advised us to find a site to acquire and do the same.
That isn't the point. The acquisition isn't the problem. The lack of disclosure is.
What kind of reputation does it give in the SEO industry when a large tool provider openly disregards advertising guidelines?
And not only that, but they also appear to be flaunting their violations through their employees and their official account.
I see on https://t.co/IRe4HzhsK0 that their toolset is trusted by @Tesla , @Decathlon , @Samsung , @FedEx and many others. Are these companies ok to have a supplier doing business in an unethical way?
Anyway, as an industry, SEO has already earned a bad reputation because of black hat tricks (past and present) that harm everyone’s earning ability. It won’t fix itself while people keep normalising these or other unethical practices.
We've started rolling out support for passkeys that let users sign in to our products with a fingerprint, a face scan or a screen lock PIN. Starting today, this will be available as an option for Google Account users.
https://t.co/wBSIqAfiCe
Introducing Route Handlers
Easily define server-side API endpoints in App Router (app/)
◆ Pre-rendering / ISR support
◆ Powered by Web APIs (Request & Response)
◆ Multi-runtime (Edge & Node.js)
◆ Declarative method-based routing
◆ Streaming support
https://t.co/hwFeT92X84
As predicted, the primary impact of other browser engines being on the horizon of coming to iOS is that Apple would invest into Safari more. This release is maybe the most clear evidence of this happening.
About a year ago Apple started hiring for the previously systematically understaffed WebKit team–and engineers are gonna ship.
Overall, this is an amazing outcome for the web. Apple's strategy so far was to invest the minimum necessary to make WebKit be very good at rendering legacy websites so that their users are happy, but also avoiding more powerful APIs that would allow the web to compete with their app ecosystem. Given competition being on the horizon they clearly needed to adjust strategy, and we're starting to see the results of that shift.
https://t.co/lIObsibv0f