This change was made because the advice was "out of date" and Google handles JavaScript fine.
Google has removed a whole section from its JavaScript SEO documentation because it was outdated and Google says loading content with JavaScript does not make it hard for Google Search.
Google removed its JavaScript accessibility guidance from help documents, saying the advice is outdated and noting it has rendered JavaScript for years.
Google's John Mueller affirmed that most sites don't need to use a disavow file but if you're conflicted about possible ...
Microsoft’s focusgroup tool is now available for early testing in Edge browsers ...
CVS Health Corp. is teaming up with Silicon Valley to launch an AI-infused health technology services company. $CVS ...
Future of Downtown San Jose Silicon Valley Business Journal's annual Future of Downtown San Jose event brings together experts to discuss what 2026 might look like in our growing region. Women of ...
Where do AI systems lose confidence in your content? Discovery, selection, crawling, rendering, and indexing hold the answer.
A Chrome extension named "QuickLens - Search Screen with Google Lens" has been removed from the Chrome Web Store after it was ...
Google and iVerify have shared details about Coruna, an exploit kit that chains multiple vulnerabilities to target iPhones ...
Malicious Chrome extensions tied to ownership transfers push malware and steal data, exposing thousands to credential theft and system compromise.
Newsflash buddy: Maps are already plenty gay ...