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[Communication] Returning to Simplicity Defeats SEOAuthor: JEFFI CHAO HUI WU Time: Thursday, July 17, 2025, 7:49 PM ········································ [Communication] Returning to Simplicity Defeats SEO I have never studied SEO, and I have never actively looked up the formal definition of the term "SEO," but that hasn't prevented me from getting my articles indexed on Google search engine without any keyword optimization, without external link placement, without traffic sources, and even without social media shares. SEO, short for Search Engine Optimization. In simple terms, it is a practice that makes what you write easier for search engines to find. Many people who write websites and content perform a series of operations around this goal, such as adjusting the structure of your website to be clearer, filling each article's title and body with popular search terms, setting a bunch of tags, descriptions, internal links, and link redirects... In fact, many companies hire people specifically to handle this task, just to improve search rankings and capture a bit of traffic. But I am not against SEO; I just have never used it. My writing process is very simple—every morning after my practice, I sit down to write a piece of genuine text and post it on an old forum I built over twenty years ago. This forum is called "Australia Long Wind Information Network," using the phpBB system from 2001, with no mobile page responsiveness, no sitemap, no RSS, no meta tags, and even the backend statistics look like they are from ten years ago. I sent it out and didn't think much of it, not expecting anyone to see it, nor did I post it on my Moments. Then one day, I suddenly wanted to test it out, so I opened the Google search box and typed in the title of the article I had just posted. I found it on the first page, and it was the first result. At first, I thought it was a coincidence, but after testing dozens of articles in succession, I realized it wasn't luck, but a pattern. From June 18 to July 16, 2025, I have written over 300 articles. These articles are not just to meet a word count or follow a template; each one contains genuine content—some discuss the process of martial arts training, some share insights on family education, some reflect on observations of artificial intelligence, and some talk about structured logical thinking. Each article is based on my personal experiences. Even more astonishing is that my articles are not just "a few" indexed by search engines, but are extensively and simultaneously included, with an average recognition time of 24 to 36 hours by Google. The fastest article was ranked in the Google search engine in just 20 hours. This cannot be explained by SEO. I didn't embed keywords, but Google still recognized the logic of my sentences; I didn't set a summary or description for the article, but it automatically grabbed paragraphs from the text to generate display text; I didn't set structured code, but the search results automatically showed the title, author, paragraph summary, and original link. I didn't do any promotion, yet the article was still seen by the world. This is not about "defeating SEO," but rather "bypassing SEO," or more accurately, returning to the essence of writing, proving in reverse: true content does not need packaging. AI search engine systems are not foolish; they will not be deceived by disguised content forever. When they see a pile of repeated keywords, meaningless paragraph stacking, and sensational titles with hollow content, they will make judgments, and they are also evolving. The content I use is all based on the paths I have truly lived. When I talk about practicing and sweating, it's not just empty words; I practice in summer clothes by the seaside at 7 degrees, sweating as I train. When I mention "a hundred days of foundation building," it's not an internet joke, but a record of my genuine practice for over three months every early morning. When I ask whether "Tai Chi can be applied in real combat," it's not something I've read in books, but the confidence I've built through years of practice as the twelfth generation heir of Chen-style Tai Chi, the sixth generation heir of Wu-style Tai Chi, and the leader of Zhao-style Xingyi Quan. My article is not a copy; it is lived out. Therefore, the search engine recognizes it, includes it, and ranks it not because I understand the technology, but because I spoke the truth, wrote real stories, and organized the realities of life with structured writing. I am not playing by the rules; I don't even know their rules. I am just writing things earnestly, and as a result, the system automatically recognized it. It's not about being clever, but about being genuine; it's not about disguise, but about structure; it's not about packaging, but about accumulation. I am not an expert; I am just someone who insists on writing about my true experiences. But the world has slowly begun to see it. Not because I have become famous, but because I have not deceived it. This is the return to simplicity, defeating SEO. Source: http://www.australianwinner.com/AuWinner/viewtopic.php?t=696904 |
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