I'm old enough to remember webrings, guestbooks, and the very, very narrow coverage of search engine queries c.1995 (Web Crawler). Webmasters promoted each other's sites because there wasn't SEO or cancerous social media algorithms to do so. Simpler times when the Web was about sharing, not profit.
Also, wow, the porn site that Robinson is alleged to have been a member of is a blast from the past. It looks like it hasn't been updated since 1998 when it first went online. There's still a link in the sidebar for "Webmasters." Incredibly how much Old Internet stuff is still kicking.
You can disagree with this kind of thinking. But let's be honest, if most webmasters had to choose between clearing ABDL content (a minority of content) or risk losing their hosting or being blocked in world regions that decided to be more severe with online content, they'll get rid of it.
Alguém lembra de um site que existia lá no anos 2000 Que chamava brumaximus Que era de webmasters(atual full stack) Era de templates pra blog mas tinha vários tutoriais e falava de programação
I used to hand new BBC webmasters/engineers their on call laptops with the directive "I'm not going to tell you what non-work things you can use it for, but ask yourself if you'd like to see it on the front cover of The Sun".
FYI: Google may index pages blocked by Robots.txt: John Mueller of Google clarifies why pages blocked by robots.txt can still appear in search results, offering key insights for webmasters.
John Mueller of Google clarifies why pages blocked by robots.txt can still appear in search results, offering key insights for webmasters.
FYI: Google may index pages blocked by Robots.txt: John Mueller of Google clarifies why pages blocked by robots.txt can still appear in search results, offering key insights for webmasters.
John Mueller of Google clarifies why pages blocked by robots.txt can still appear in search results, offering key insights for webmasters.
ICYMI: Google may index pages blocked by Robots.txt: John Mueller of Google clarifies why pages blocked by robots.txt can still appear in search results, offering key insights for webmasters.
John Mueller of Google clarifies why pages blocked by robots.txt can still appear in search results, offering key insights for webmasters.