Depends on Google. These tech companies don't like new platforms, especially those competing with established ones like Reddit. You'll see that Google often discriminates against Lemmy or Mastodon.
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Ok, not a stupid question - but annoying to assume that only Google is relevant.
Also, annoying that you'll assume that searching 'instant rice' will pull results from Lemmy. Even searching Lemmy for 'instant rice' brings zero results.
- Instant rice simply had all of the good parts milled out If you really are interested, I'd skip it entirely - 'instant' rice is basically rice that got everything milled out of it, then it's cooked, then dried - it costs a lot more and tastes like shit.
So I hope my answer will come up in your next search...
However, searching for 'sending epub files to my kindle' brings up quite a few... and down the list there, we see posts from 2022 in r/kindle, and entering reddit as an extra keyword pulls up more...
So really, we want to know if we search for something which should have results in Lemmy.ml, Lemmy.world - and not only Lemmy, there are others - like BeeHaw) how long is it going to take before this gets picked up by SEARCH ENGINES (Let's not say Google, or Reddit - these are bad habits unless there's a specific need to specify).> instant rice
Lemmy is not as unique as Reddit as a word. I get a lot of Lemmy Kilmister matches. But still hopeful
I was searching for the “3 days no poop” meme. Lots of Lemmy stuff showed up.
I searched "3 days no poop meme" and I saw 2 from Reddit on the first page (via qwant),
No Lemmy.
Adding Lemmy helps
How many of the millions of people doing searches will add Lemmy specifically? This only works if you wish to specifically search Lemmy, for which I'd suggest adding (intext:"modlog" & "instances" & "docs" & "code" & "join lemmy" | intext:"powered by kbin")
to a Whoogle search would do better.