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Should Webmasters Resist Google's Push For AMP Pages? (polemicdigital.com) 190

"Have you heard of Google AMP? That stands for Accelerated Mobile Pages, and it's a way of making webpages so that they load faster and display more efficiently on mobile devices. Oh, and it puts your website under Google's control."

That's Mac Observer co-founder Bryan Chaffin, linking to an "interesting reading" titled "Google AMP Can Go To Hell." AMP allows Google to basically take over hosting the web as well. The Google AMP Cache will serve AMP pages instead of a website's own hosting environment, and also allow Google to perform their own optimisations to further enhance user experience. As a side benefit, it also allows Google full control over content monetisation. No more rogue ad networks, no more malicious ads, all monetisation approved and regulated by Google. If anything happens that falls outside of the AMP standard's restrictions, the page in question simply becomes AMP-invalid and is ejected from the AMP cache -- and subsequently from Google's results. At that point the page might as well not exist any more....

The easy thing to do is to simply obey. Do what Google says. Accept their proclamations and jump when they tell you to. Or you could fight back. You could tell them to stuff it, and find ways to undermine their dominance. Use a different search engine, and convince your friends and family to do the same. Write to your elected officials and ask them to investigate Google's monopoly. Stop using the Chrome browser. Ditch your Android phone. Turn off Google's tracking of your every move. And, for goodness sake, disable AMP on your website.

Don't feed the monster -- fight it.

Here's how web developer Macieg Ceeglowski put it in 2015. "Out of an abundance of love for the mobile web, Google has volunteered to run the infrastructure, especially the user tracking parts of it." But are these assessments too harsh? Leave your own thoughts in the comment.

Should webmasters resist Google's push for AMP pages?
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Should Webmasters Resist Google's Push For AMP Pages?

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  • by BoRegardless ( 721219 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @12:43AM (#57278384)

    Dictators do not work for industry or countries.

    • by perpenso ( 1613749 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @04:23AM (#57278704)

      Dictators do not work for industry or countries.

      They used to, sometimes. But modern dictators ain't what they used to be. ;-)

      In the Roman Republic (emphasize Republic, after the kings, before the emperors) the dictator had a temporary appointment and absolute authority limited to the territory in crisis, for example a region with active warfare. An interesting story:

      Rome was invaded. The Senate appointed a man named Cincinnatus dictator for six months. On his first day he appointed a military commander and ordered all able bodied males in Rome to report for military service. The next day they marched to meet the enemy. He outmaneuvered the enemy and put them in a very bad position, they begged for mercy. The deal was to execute the top three enemy leaders and grant amnesty to the bulk of the enemy army. Cincinnatus then disbanded his Roman army and resigned the dictatorship. He was dictator for about two weeks and then returned to his farm outside of Rome.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • Dictators do not work for industry or countries.

      Too late, you missed the fact that companies can basically steal and lock down products from the safety of their offices and extract "tribute" from the masses. This happened to videogames. Ultimately all the big videogame companies are looking to lock software inside the "cloud".

      You'd need physical proximity to the business to force companies to give you the software you are paying for. They can just steal it and call it a service.

      To call a society where the big software companies make software and never

  • Hell yes (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ahodgson ( 74077 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @12:44AM (#57278388)

    And their font servers. And Google Analytics. And their "free" dns. Fuck Google tracking everything everyone does online.

    • No, fuck the shitty web sites which have dozens of ad servers and mouse tracking and other shit that make
      websites use 150meg + of RAM.

      Filter those ads out and the website uses under 10meg.

      This is why so many websites fail/crash under older iPads and make them useless, thus driving sales of new hardware. Filter those ads out, and bingo, suddenly, all websites work real well on 5 year old iPads.

      Fucking useless coders adding so much useless over head that does nothing for the user.

      Googles trackers are super li

  • Desktop view (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @12:53AM (#57278400)

    Don't know about you guys but 99% of the time on my phone I'm using the desktop version of a page. I hate mobile site design with its tons of empty space and enormous fonts.

    • Re:Desktop view (Score:5, Insightful)

      by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @01:00AM (#57278410)

      Gotta agree. Don’t know if the fundamental issue is actually ”mobile” or just “dumb designers”... but mobile sites usually suck.

      And “responsive” sites mostly seem to take that bad mobile ethos and force it on everybody, including desktop browsers. In any case, I guess that’s at least equal-opportunity suckitude...

      • by Anonymous Coward

        It's mostly dumb designers. It's been many years since web devs gained access to tools to separate content from mark up and they aren't using them properly.

        Similarly, the ui is similarly tainted by trying to use the same one on handhelds and larger displays.

      • Gotta agree. Don’t know if the fundamental issue is actually ”mobile” or just “dumb designers”... but mobile sites usually suck.

        And “responsive” sites mostly seem to take that bad mobile ethos and force it on everybody, including desktop browsers. In any case, I guess that’s at least equal-opportunity suckitude...

        I gotta go with dumb designers. I'm a half dumb designer, and I manage to make the sites I run look good on whichever platform you are on.

        I suspect these hotshots do not check out their pages except on the computer they design them on. I check my sites out on phone before I publish.

    • I'm used to the layout of the full website, scrolling and zooming is less difficult than finding where the mobile version put something if it had it at all. Similarly, opening a site in a browser whether desktop or mobile version is for the most part easier than using the site's app.

    • I hate mobile site design, with its tons of empty space and enormous fonts, with the intensity of a thousand burning suns.

      TFTFM.

    • by Ecuador ( 740021 )

      Actually, enormous fonts are not that bad for mobile and well, *some* empty space to click links confidently is good... But almost all mobile sites either have just a subset of the functionality, or require you to go through considerable effort to get to some information that was right there on the desktop version.
      So, yeah, I also use desktop sites, and for that reason I chose a phone with the largest screen that still fits my hand (a 5.99" thin-bezel XIaomi Mi Mix 2).
      As for Google, they have taken over Mic

    • Don't know about you guys but 99% of the time on my phone I'm using the desktop version of a page. I hate mobile site design with its tons of empty space and enormous fonts.

      I can't stand the web while using my phone either. The weird thing is, the sites I have control over look the same on either phone or tablet or desktop.

      And I'm no dummy, but sure as hell not a hotshot. Fully functional web pages.

    • Yeah, I can't even figure out what the "push" is that is intended to be resisted; it seems to me they published some specs, offered some services, and nobody wants to use it. For obvious reasons.

      If they want to apply force, I say, "Bring It!" Microsoft tried that, it doesn't end well for them. If they want to go that route, while already having a monopoly, they end up either split into pieces, or siloed into them.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @01:02AM (#57278412)

    Betteridge be damned.

  • GPDR (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    I look forward to the day Google gets record breaking fine for collecting all these personal information without informing or consent from the end users.

    Google is free to withdraw from Europe as they had withdrawn from China. Another Europe based search engine will take over, as has happened in China.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @01:14AM (#57278438)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Seems like every year the distinction between the two narrows. Wouldn't that mean that AMP's original purpose is soon obsolete once mobile devices (both CPU and network) are fast enough for the job.

    • by tsa ( 15680 )

      And then Google has the whole world wide web under its control.

    • I don't care how fast my network is. I don't want bandwidth-wasting mobile sites. Not just because I have a limited data cap, but it's still faster to have a lean site regardless.

      • theoretically it's the desktop sites that use more bandwidth. they are supposed to be simpler and easier for the device to process and contain less layout directives and fewer superfluous images. Arguable if it is successful in practice, but that is the intent.

        Having a site that loads in 50ms versus 20ms won't really matter to a typical end-user. Of course a site that loads in 5 seconds versus 2 seconds will be noticeable. So scale does matter. I predict "desktop" sites will be able to load on our phones in

        • Having a site that loads in 50ms versus 20ms won't really matter to a typical end-user

          If only load times aimed low. It took 300ms just to load the HTML for this page. Nothing else loaded until then. The Javascript on the page took 1.17 seconds and the last resource didn't finish loading until almost the 4 second mark. The page did start rendering by about 1-2 seconds, so it didn't feel slow. But Slashdot is actually on the nice end of load times compared to especially news sites.

          • I remember when a large page took 10-15 seconds to load in Lynx, and it wouldn't display until it the HTML was completely downloaded.

            I think like most other things, the software expands as memory, network, and processing power increases. Leaving us with only slightly faster user experience rather than the 1000x faster experience that raw numbers might indicate. (4MB unix workstation running Lynx on a 20 MHz cpu, to a 16GB laptop with four 2 GHz cpus). It seems faster, but not massively so. Much prettier tho

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Not is the network is a going to be a direct network to an ad company.
  • It is the framework which changes with each new technology and not just the picture within the frame.
    ~Marshall McLuhan

    The web's search for mechanisms of underwriting is reflected in the screen's "real estate" beginning with AOL's valuations that were sufficient to merge with Time/Warner and navigation was compromised by strategic ad placement informed by users' studies-- the screen was so crowded out, advertisers sought as many inadvertent clicks as purposeful ones. Notions of micro-payments were floate
  • by rundgong ( 1575963 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @02:27AM (#57278554)

    I bet Google crawlers love it when a web page is small, fast to load, and easy to navigate.
    But do you know who else likes that? HUMANS like that too!

    I get that there are some legitimate issues with AMP, but this sounds a bit like the guy in one of the linked articles is annoyed that Google wants him to stop making shitty websites and he doesn't like it at all because it creates more work for him.

    • I bet Google crawlers love it when a web page is small, fast to load, and easy to navigate.

      I bet Google doesn't care for regular desktop pages.

      • I would love to have Google give lower rankings for desktop sites full of bloated slow loading crap too.

    • And they get a monopoly over websites after that? Than what? They show you what they want to show you. You sure you want a monopoly over a bit longer load time?
    • I get that there are some legitimate issues with AMP, but this sounds a bit like the guy in one of the linked articles is annoyed that Google wants him to stop making shitty websites and he doesn't like it at all because it creates more work for him.

      This sounds a bit like a paid Google shill who is annoyed others would dare challenge Google's defacto Monopoly search position and associated bid to take over the Web.

      The above statement is a mirror. Don't blame me if you don't like the reflection.

      • So by acknowledging it has issues but pointing out that parts of it is actually good for end users, that makes me a shill?
        Google's dominance is obviously a huge problem when they abuse it. But the solution is not to keep making shitty bloated websites.

        • So by acknowledging it has issues but pointing out that parts of it is actually good for end users, that makes me a shill?

          Do you think I'm being unfair to you? That was the point.

          It was a demonstration of the problem with mudslinging:

          "this sounds a bit like the guy in one of the linked articles is annoyed that Google wants him to stop making shitty websites and he doesn't like it at all because it creates more work for him".

          You without citing evidence assert the person is lazy, angry and that he makes "shitty websites" in an attempt to marginalize and discredit him. I simply pulled the same stunt and directed it at yourself.

          • I didn't say angry, but I stand by lazy and shitty websites. Obviously a bit exaggerated to make a point.
            The evidence are the screenshots he posted about his sites issues according to Google. (bad mobile version of his website)
            And the whole article is there because it creates more work for him, and he does not want to do it.(lazy)

            • I didn't say angry, but I stand by lazy and shitty websites.

              Annoyed is a subset of anger.

              The evidence are the screenshots he posted about his sites issues according to Google.

              Totality of screenshots provide the following data:

              "Reported page navigation issue on your AMP pages
              Reported missing non-critical content issue on your AMP pages
              Reported social media issue on your AMP pages
              Reported media issue on your AMP pages

              An evaluation of your site has revealed issues with some of your AMP pages. This issue will not affect your appearance on search, but with just a few changes, you could improve the user experience on these pages. You can see a list of af

              • It's not vague. They enumerate 4 features that are present on the main page, but are missing on the mobile version.
                His argument is that there is more work to also fix it for mobile. That means he is choosing to create an inferior version because he doesn't want to do the work. That means he is a lazy developer. Which by the way does not mean he is a lazy person
                A lazy developer is someone who takes the easy way out instead of doing the right thing.. You can do that while still working your ass off.

                • His argument is that there is more work to also fix it for mobile.

                  You seem to be confusing outcomes with modalities.

                  Nowhere in TFA is author indicating refusal to support mobile. There is no indication given whether his mobile site needs or does not need to be "fixed for mobile". The argument is entirely AMP vs NOT AMP.

                  That means he is choosing to create an inferior version because he doesn't want to do the work. That means he is a lazy developer. That means he is a lazy developer. Which by the way does not mean he is a lazy person
                  A lazy developer is someone who takes the easy way out instead of doing the right thing.. You can do that while still working your ass off.

                  If the definition of lazy is "someone who takes the easy way out instead of doing the right thing" What is the right thing in this case? Using Google AMP?

                  To quote TFA:
                  "AMP is being kept alive artificially. AMP survives not because of its merits as a pro

                  • My assumption is that doing what google has suggested will improve the mobile web page, but you seem to think that it is perfect the way it is and needs no change. Obviously it is impossible for either of us to know the truth. And we might disagree on this even if we knew what site it is referring to.

                    There is no indication given whether his mobile site needs or does not need to be "fixed for mobile". The argument is entirely AMP vs NOT AMP.

                    It seems to me that the things google suggest would improve the mobile experience. That is what I'm talking about.
                    And for the item about social media, I would suggest removing it on both platforms. That would b

                    • My assumption is that doing what google has suggested will improve the mobile web page, but you seem to think that it is perfect the way it is and needs no change.

                      The above assumes things that were never stated. There is no information provided in TFA with which to evaluate any web page. I certainly never stated a positive or negative opinion about his sites.

                      Obviously it is impossible for either of us to know the truth. And we might disagree on this even if we knew what site it is referring to.

                      Yet you were able to state the author is lazy, angry and has a shitty site without evidence.

                      It seems to me that the things google suggest would improve the mobile experience. That is what I'm talking about.

                      No, the messages are AMP specific and do not necessarily have anything to do with "mobile experience" which can exist independent of AMP.

                      It is not clear what effect it will have on page rank. The suggestion itself says "This issue will not affect your appearance on search".

                      Page rank issue raised in TFA has to do with perceived rank disparity of a website

  • AMP is a takeover of the web by a monster. You don't feed the monster, you fight it!
    • Re: Of-course (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It just makes it easer for Google to shadowban a site

  • Web pages are relatively easy to make load fast if you sacrifice certain things and avoid faddish temptations.

  • by shess ( 31691 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @04:00AM (#57278674) Homepage

    AFAICT, most web properties which would even consider using AMP in the first place have never seen a JavaScript tracking framework they didn't like. Oh, LardScript Analytics? Yes, sign me up! I realize that you can't just deliver my 2k of actual content, you need to brand and stuff with headers and footers and links to follow, but do you really need 20MB spread across 350 resources to do it? Get that down to something reasonable like 50k of dynamic stuff and a couple 100k of highly-cacheable stuff, and AMP would be pointless.

    https://danluu.com/web-bloat/ [danluu.com]

    • True story: about two years ago, Google chatted with our marketing team about AMP, and how it was the bee's knees and would make everything SO FAST for us. They presented the Marketing team with charts showing approximately 2 seconds of page load, and how AMP could cut that down!

      When they got back from California and we showed them that 90% of that 2 seconds was analytics+tracking, they were less "amped"...
  • Yes. Say no to AMP. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Chas ( 5144 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @04:03AM (#57278676) Homepage Journal

    Google already has enough of a stranglehold over the web.

    And don't go with the Facebook Instant Articles or Apple News either.

    While AMP is, ostensibly, an open-source project, the fact that it's leadership is in the hands of these corporate advertising giants should give anyone with a lick of sense pause.

  • by mccalli ( 323026 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @04:10AM (#57278690) Homepage
    AMP just seems like WAP reborn to me, only hosted at Google. Makes it easier for them to parse, but nobody actually wanted it. Should be any easy one to refuse.
  • So a Man In The Middle attack you opt into?

    • So a Man In The Middle attack you opt into?

      I can haz cheezeburger? In the middle? Man?

      Their problem is, they haven't convinced anybody that amp is a cheeseburger, it just sounds like buzzword salad.

  • Fuck Webmasters (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Z34107 ( 925136 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @04:20AM (#57278700)

    Should webmasters "resist Google's push for AMP pages"? Webmasters should really just write mobile websites that don't suck ass, but that's apparently just not something they'll do of their own volition. Most of my mobile browsing is just reading some headlines to kill time, and it's amazing how bad news websites in particular are--laggy scrolling, pop-overs, teleporting ads, teleporting paragraphs, etc. When AMP came out, that shit disappeared from anything I Googled practically overnight--any time I've clicked (tapped, I guess) through to an AMP page, it's loaded quickly, scrolling has worked, and nothing teleports.

    Are there privacy implications? Of course, but they're rather marginal for someone already using Google's search engine, e-mail, news reader, chat programs, and browser. Is AMP necessary to write a good mobile website? Of course not, but writing a good mobile website is just not something a paste-eating webmaster will do unless someone grabs him by the ad dollars, forces him into a padded cell, and takes away so much markup he couldn't possibly fuck up what's left.

    TL;DR AMP exists because webmasters are universally incompetent. If you chucklefucks weren't utter failures, AMP would never have happened.

    • Webmasters should really just write mobile websites that don't suck ass, but that's apparently just not something they'll do of their own volition.

      And since Google is doing it for them, they will NEVER learn. I don't see this as a good thing.

      If Google has their thumb on the scales, the market will never have the correct information to shutter bad sites.

  • by Gabe Ghearing ( 3618909 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @05:39AM (#57278826)

    The last straw for me was when I realized how many pages were breaking BECAUSE Google was silently redirecting to AMP versions of pages. Google forces all users that it thinks are on iOS or Android to their AMP variants even though there are TONs of bugs on iOS that Google is not fixing.

    The nonAMP version of the AMP website works better than the AMP version... Check out how AMP breaks scroll-to-top taps on iOS by stuffing everything in extra iframes. Try scrolling around while zoomed in on iOS ... Googleâ(TM)s JavaScript that tries to progressively load content will inevitably screw up and stop you from scrolling far. https://www.google.com/amp/s/w... [google.com]

  • While there are problems with AMP, the real problem - which AMP does well to combat - is shitty, bloated, ad-vomiting websites.

    • 1. Promote shitty bloated ad-vomiting websites.
      2. Claim the web experience is broken.
      3. Insist your proprietary technology which detects & catalogs 100% of the web experience is the solution!
      4. Profit!
      5. Goto 1...
  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Sunday September 09, 2018 @06:25AM (#57278880)

    ... and, AFAICT, a good and useful one.

    Why should I resist that?

    So AMP is a reduced HTML standard to make mobile websites load faster and less bloated that the bullshit we see today spewed into the public web by people who can't tell a server from a client and shouldn't be let near a keyboard of a connected computer, let alone in the lead position of some web project. Pagecalls weigh in twice to three times as heavy as an entire Amiga operating system these days. If your would delivered such a thing 18 years ago people would've beat you up and for good reasons too.

    So Google wants to cache my website with AMP? Nice. Go right ahead. If they update the content in their cache whenever I do I'm all for it. The more I can tell clients that their crappy bloated piece of shit they call a website is going to be deranked into unseen depths of Google if they don't use sensible unbroken web presentations, AMP is a good thing and it will be a part of my optimisation strategy for professional websites.

    • ... then google should do something about all the slow trackers on the websites, including the painfully slow site known as google fonts.
    • You seem really, really confused about the technical details.

      It isn't a cache. That's just a buzzword they put in to trick idiots. A cache returns the thing cached, so you don't have to look it up again. A proxy that alters the data for each user is not a cache at all. Even if they write the word "cache" in the name.

    • Why? It's and open standard... and, AFAICT, a good and useful one.

      Useful for who? The utility it provides is to Google, not the user.

      There may come a day when I let Google tell me how I want to utilize HTTP.

      But today is not that day.

  • the page in question simply becomes AMP-invalid and is ejected from the AMP cache -- and subsequently from Google's results

    I'm not sure this statement is true.

  • The subject says it all. Google is neither in charge of the internet nor trustworthy. Resist everything they suggest.
    • If they're not in charge, why would you need to "resist?" Just say no, man. Just say no.

      • If they're not in charge, why would you need to "resist?"

        Google thinks they are in charge. They need to be persuaded they aren't.
        • Nonsense. There is a guy on the street corner who thinks he's Jesus. My spiritual freedom does not require me to convince him he's wrong. I can actually just ignore it, because he doesn't have magic powers.

          Same here. If they're not in charge, nobody needs to tell them. They can learn about it, or not, who cares?

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @08:55AM (#57279156)
    ... that google's interests are aligned with my interests. Currently, I see little, if any, benefit, and a whole lot of downside. I'll pass.
    • AMP is basically an attempt to do 'embrace and extend' the open Web with their own replacement 'ecosystem' (which is 'on paper' supposedly open, but in practice it's basically 'their ecosystem'). This is a classic page out the book of the old Microsoft. They're effective trying to replace the Web (with its pesky competitors OS-wise, software-wise, advertising-wise) with 'GoogleWeb'.

      Anyone who can't see the serious problems here, lacks imagination.

      The more webmasters who join and make their websites AMP-comp

  • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @09:11AM (#57279204)

    AMP has two parts. One is a set of very sensible rules for doing good websites. The second is a way for Google to take control of the web.

    So what you should do is simple. Make a website that is compatible with AMP. Then remove all Google stuff. You will end up with a website that is independent and fast. And when you are at it, apply the same principles to your destop website.

  • "Google to perform their own optimisations to further enhance user experience"

    I read this as inserting their targeted paid ads. Don't buy from this site, buy from one of our paid ad clients.

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • by morethanapapercert ( 749527 ) on Sunday September 09, 2018 @01:02PM (#57279988) Homepage
    This really reminds of the days of AOL at its peak. AOL tried really hard to give its userbase the impression that their network of sites was the Internet. Back then I knew at least a handful of people who honestly thought what they were getting with their AOL account was the Internet in its entirety. Many of those that at least knew there was a vast world beyond AOL shunned it, fearing the "wild west" that was the Internet in those days.

    On the other hand, everyone who was clued in Internet-wise, hated AOL and everything it stood for. They were frequently and viciously attacked for their monopolistic practices. Is Google in the middle of jumping the shark here?

  • Everyone seems so eager to destroy all the open platforms and give all the power to a few arbitrary proprietary systems dictated by a literal handful of people... what could possibly go wrong?

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