That's a cool schema, but the LLM solution is necessary because recipe website makers will never use the schema because they want you to have to read through garbage, with some misguided belief that this helps their SEO or something. Or maybe they get more money if you scroll through more ads?
How do they make money then? Or do you think they are doing some sort of public service and you are entitled?
They make long articles to maximize ad exposure and SEO. It's good faith --they're doing what they have to to make money with the underlying tech ecosystem-- but it's not a good outcome.
LLMs are shifting that ecosystem (at least temporarily) and new revenue models will emerge. It'll take time to figure out. But we shouldn't artificially support a bad system just because it's the existing system.
Transitions are always awkward. In the meantime, I'm inclined to give people rope to experiment.
It seems that your answer is a long euphemism for "I don't give a damn how they make money, they better find a new way I guess".
I'm genuinely a bit confused by the recipe blog business model. Like there's got to be one, right? People don't usually spew the same story about their grandma hundreds of times on a real blog.
Just hitting keywords for search? Many of them don't even have ads so I feel like that can't be it. Maybe referrals?
SEO. Longer articles get ranked higher.
Makes sense, thanks, but how do you actually make money from that without tons of ads? I realise this is a super naive question haha
> without tons of ads
This is a requirement? I literally only browse the web with an ad blocker but I always assumed those sites had tons of ads.
Lol, that's funny - good point, I completely forgot I had an ad blocker running 24/7. I don't think I've browsed the raw internet in more than a decade...
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