Will Lemmy posts be searchable on Google?

QuinicV@lemmy.world to No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world – 57 points –

A great use for reddit is the ability to search posts and opinions about any niche topic. Will that be possible with Lemmy as it grows? Will I be able to Google "instant rice Lemmy" and get a comprehensive tier list of each brand?

I imagine search engines will have trouble with all the different instances(?). EDIT: Especially with instances that don't have Lemmy in their name, I don't think search engines would return them for Lemmy searches?

65

You are viewing a single comment

@QuinicV Why would it not be possible? It depends on the software, if all text is open to be indexed. Kbin and Lemmy instances are basically open forum software and are indexed by search engines. You can test it in Google or other engines by forcing to search on the site only with site:lemmy.world are posts indexed? , which would be an empty search result if they were locked down like discord content.

But what if the post I'm searching for is not on lemmy.world? Say the instance doesn't even have Lemmy in their name, like beehaw.org. How would a search engine index it? How would it know it's part of Lemmy?

There will be links to everything somewhere. The same way you knew to get the cave in the same way you know to get to Lemmy. There are already links that have been posted to Reddit that are in archives that are easily followable. Google doesn't just search one or two things they search all the links to the things and then the links from those things to other things. If Google can't figure out how to get to it chances are you don't know it's there either.

@QuinicV This was just an example how to prove that the content from Lemmy is indexed and searchable by Google. If you do a websearch without limiting to a specific domain, then it will search through all indexed Lemmy content that is known to Google too. At the moment there is no way to search Lemmy (or related) content only.

What we need is a search engine that only tracks ActivityPub content from Lemmy, Kbin and Mastodon (and others). Let's call it ActivitySearch. Maybe SearX engine could be modified to do this.