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Economy => Service Discussion => Topic started by: shield132 on November 13, 2025, 07:32:01 AM



Title: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: shield132 on November 13, 2025, 07:32:01 AM
When I find on Bitcointalk someone sharing news from a barely known news website, I always type the title in a search engine to check whether the same or similar news is published by other famous news websites. Recently I noticed that I no longer see a result from Cointelegraph in Google. Today, I tried to type Cointelegraph.com in Google's search engine and I didn't get any result. Did Google completely remove Cointelegraph from its search engine? That's strange, Google hasn't removed torrent websites from its search engine and what issue did they have with Cointelegraph?


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: crwth on November 13, 2025, 07:40:05 AM
Upon using Google, I did see that Cointelegraph isn't appearing at the top or anywhere on the first page, but with Bing, it's the top link. For Google, it's mostly tweets, with no direct link to the site. Even on the right, it's just the company's background.

Google
https://talkimg.com/images/2025/11/13/UPHJCW.png

Bing
https://talkimg.com/images/2025/11/13/UPHfWm.png

This is pretty weird. Thankfully, it's easy for me to check their published news with Telegram. I used the link below. Maybe it has been reported or something.

https://t.me/cointelegraph


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: hopenotlate on November 13, 2025, 07:49:07 AM
lol yep.
I also often read Cointelegraph to keep up to date with the news and I had never noticed what you said: I use DuckDuck Go as my default search engine and Cointelegraph normally appears among the results there but I tried a Google search and indeed it does not appear among the results whilst their Twitter handle shows up amongst the first results.

Weird.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: Oshosondy on November 13, 2025, 08:32:35 AM
This is true, I also tried it now it it is not showing anything than their post on X, their app and other things that you can not use to access the site home page. I was unable to see any news or home page of the site.

But if you include the .com to it, I mean cointelegraph.com, you will be able to access the site and see the latest news.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: avp2306 on November 13, 2025, 10:15:06 AM
When I find on Bitcointalk someone sharing news from a barely known news website, I always type the title in a search engine to check whether the same or similar news is published by other famous news websites. Recently I noticed that I no longer see a result from Cointelegraph in Google. Today, I tried to type Cointelegraph.com in Google's search engine and I didn't get any result. Did Google completely remove Cointelegraph from its search engine? That's strange, Google hasn't removed torrent websites from its search engine and what issue did they have with Cointelegraph?

Looks like cointelegraph SEO dropped and maybe this is the reason on why they can't be found when people search them on google.

I also  tried to use microsoft bing and their site show up at top the same as what @crwth shown.

https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/11/13/UPHe1f.png

Also if you used brave you can see their site there.

So most likely there's an issue on their SEO that's why it didn't show up when we use google.



Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: ABCbits on November 13, 2025, 10:53:14 AM
I just tried searching "cointelegraph" on Google (while using VPN) and surprised the website isn't shown on the first 5 pages. So rather than bad SEO, it seems something wrong on either cointelegraph website or google side. Although i don't expect google intentionally blacklist/remove cointelegraph due to their mixed quality news/article.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: noorman0 on November 13, 2025, 11:10:08 AM
I think this is the reason:

Quote
Cointelegraph’s traffic was destroyed by Google’s algorithm and crypto media is in trouble
Google’s Update Wiped Out 1M Monthly Visits from Cointelegraph
Earlier in 2025, Cointelegraph’s traffic saw modest dips of less than 2% in May and June. Traffic peaked at 8.08 million visits in July 2025 after that — a strong 42% month-over-month increase.

However, after reaching the July peak, its traffic fell by 12.4% to 7.08 million in August and then further by 14.8% to 6.03 million in September. Preliminary October estimates suggest around 5 million visits, meaning Cointelegraph has been losing roughly 1 million visits per month for the past three months — a decline unseen in previous years.
Source (https://crypto.news/cointelegraph-traffic-was-destroyed-by-google/)


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: Yaunfitda on November 13, 2025, 11:17:50 AM
I just tried searching "cointelegraph" on Google (while using VPN) and surprised the website isn't shown on the first 5 pages. So rather than bad SEO, it seems something wrong on either cointelegraph website or google side. Although i don't expect google intentionally blacklist/remove cointelegraph due to their mixed quality news/article.
Probably it's because of the geo-location too that's why some will show up the website, while for others it was buried down. And Google from time to time changes it's algo and it's SEO features. So what works for the last year or so might not work for now because of the changes. In any case that for some Cointelegraph is a reliable source of news, there are Decrypt, Coindesk and the Block. As for other crypto related sites that are not well known of, usually they will get their feed from this big news outlet.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: Solosanz on November 13, 2025, 04:19:44 PM
It's good to see Cointelegraph to be like this because they usually share misleading or false information about Bitcoin, I think it's not a threat or problem for Bitcoin, but this could be a good time for other medias who create high quality and appropriate contents to rise.

Based on above user article, we might likely see them in the next year Q1.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: aioc on November 13, 2025, 04:34:56 PM
I think this is the reason:


Source (https://crypto.news/cointelegraph-traffic-was-destroyed-by-google/)
[/quote]

From the source:
Quote
Can Cointelegraph Recover?
History suggests that even the most severe algorithmic blows aren’t always permanent. Websites that once seemed buried have rebounded through systematic adaptation. Cointelegraph’s fall is dramatic, but not necessarily final.

I consider them to be one of the top Crypto media I am subscribed to their newsletter so I need not use Google to find them, but 32% direct traffic from search engine is such a huge loss, they need a good webmaster to sync their algo to Google's so they can be found again on the popular terms related to Cryptocurrency.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: tabas on November 13, 2025, 07:50:58 PM
I thought that coindesk acquired them because of what the page of coindesk is telling, it seems that their competitor is also aware of what's happening on them. But if we go through the domain directly, they're still existing so, it's really with google's seo algo that had them lose more traffic.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: The Cryptovator on November 14, 2025, 07:20:38 PM
I thought that coindesk acquired them because of what the page of coindesk is telling, it seems that their competitor is also aware of what's happening on them. But if we go through the domain directly, they're still existing so, it's really with google's seo algo that had them lose more traffic.
The CoinDesk quote is the most interesting part, and you should realise this isn't an SEO issue. Do you guys think such a big company like Cointelegraph doesn't know about SEO? This isn't an SEO or tag issue; there is something wrong with Google and Cointelegraph. Otherwise Google shouldn't take down Cointelegraph. Even CoinDesk is doing some kind of criticism when you are searching for Cointelegraph in Google.

However, I have noticed it before but haven't bothered to raise the concerns. I have been following the Cointelegraph Telegram channel. When I find something important, I try to read the full news on Google. But during the search, I never got a link from the Google search; rather, I found related tweets from the Cointelegraph. So I thought there was something wrong.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: logfiles on November 14, 2025, 07:50:50 PM
More reason for people to look past Google. Sometimes they even censor certain such results. Bing is also another wolf in a sheep skin. I personally made sure that alternative such engines such as DuckDuckGo are on default in my browsers. And guess what, searching up "cointelegraph" on DuckDuckGo also brings it up at the very top.

There is also startpage.com though it shows mostly social media channels at the very top?

https://talkimg.com/images/2025/11/14/UP6fea.png


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: Zwei on November 14, 2025, 07:55:30 PM
I thought that coindesk acquired them because of what the page of coindesk is telling, it seems that their competitor is also aware of what's happening on them. But if we go through the domain directly, they're still existing so, it's really with google's seo algo that had them lose more traffic.
The CoinDesk quote is the most interesting part, and you should realise this isn't an SEO issue. Do you guys think such a big company like Cointelegraph doesn't know about SEO? This isn't an SEO or tag issue; there is something wrong with Google and Cointelegraph. Otherwise Google shouldn't take down Cointelegraph. Even CoinDesk is doing some kind of criticism when you are searching for Cointelegraph in Google.
this is what i think as well, this is definitely beyond just a normal SEO problem, probably a manual action against them.
if you check the domain using site:cointelegraph.com, google have deindexed all their links, only some subdomains are still indexed.

https://talkimg.com/images/2025/11/14/UP6kUw.png

i had the same thing happen to a website i was running, and even after trying to revive it for a few months, it never got indexed again. the only fix that worked for me was changing domain name, but the site never recovered to where it was before so i just gave up on it.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: shield132 on November 15, 2025, 07:30:53 AM
I just tried searching "cointelegraph" on Google (while using VPN) and surprised the website isn't shown on the first 5 pages. So rather than bad SEO, it seems something wrong on either cointelegraph website or google side. Although i don't expect google intentionally blacklist/remove cointelegraph due to their mixed quality news/article.
To my mind, it can't be an SEO problem. Cointelegraph is an old domain that has a high reputation in search engines, lots of high quality backlinks and white hat seo since publishes articles every day. Besides Google removing Cointelegraph, I can't think about anything else. Bad SEO means when you are not ranked in top results but when I search Cointelegraph, I can't get a result in Google, I manually visited every page. Also, when I type cointelegraph.com, I still can't see Cointelegraph.
Usually, when you type a domain name in a search engine, Google always shows it, even if it's a new and unranked domain. In the case of Cointelegraph, this doesn't happen.

Edit
P.S I typed site:cointelegraph.com and I can see Cointelegraph with other local Cointelegraph subdomains but I can't see any link of any news that has ever been published on their website. Something's very wrong and I can't explain.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: rat03gopoh on November 15, 2025, 08:30:38 AM
I thought that coindesk acquired them because of what the page of coindesk is telling, it seems that their competitor is also aware of what's happening on them.
CD is cooking up something to increase retention, they are aware that CT also has high traffic despite experiencing serious "disruptions"

this is definitely beyond just a normal SEO problem, probably a manual action against them.
if you check the domain using site:cointelegraph.com, google have deindexed all their links, only some subdomains are still indexed.
I agree with this part, and yeah the dorking trick should actually sharpen search results. This is clearly not organic; I think it's more like an attempt to deindex them. I stumbled up on another report with a different analysis:
Quote
However, upon examining the data from Ahrefs and SEMrush, we found a different story. While fluctuations in the news media outlet traffic were visible throughout 2025, the sharp downturn began around October 6, over two weeks after the Spam Update concluded on September 21. This timing suggests that Cointelegraph may have been affected by a manual penalty.

The situation follows a December 2024 investigative report by SEO expert Timothy Malmros, which alleged that Cointelegraph’s iGaming section may have been operated by a third party, potentially constituting reputation abuse. Nearly a year later, following the decline in traffic, Cointelegraph removed its entire iGaming section, according to archival records from the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine.
https://theholycoins.com/news/cointelegraph-traffic-drop-and-igaming-section-removal-suggest-a-possible-manual-google-penalty#:~:text=we%20found%20a%20different%20story



Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: PX-Z on November 16, 2025, 01:30:03 PM
Here's an article about that Cointelegraph’s traffic was destroyed by Google’s algorithm and crypto media is in trouble (https://crypto.news/cointelegraph-traffic-was-destroyed-by-google/).

Here's gemini overview as well
https://talkimg.com/images/2025/11/16/UPFxy9.png
Basically google's algo punish them from recent incident where metamask did block or put cointelegraph on their blocklist site. Probably the company behind CT is working to fix that problem as it affect so much their site's organic visibility.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: tabas on November 16, 2025, 05:43:50 PM
I thought that coindesk acquired them because of what the page of coindesk is telling, it seems that their competitor is also aware of what's happening on them.
CD is cooking up something to increase retention, they are aware that CT also has high traffic despite experiencing serious "disruptions"
They know how to play SEO and keywords and the other competitor is having that issues. So, if someone searches for it, their website is what is going to appear on the results. It's a brilliant idea to be honest and that's part of having a business. Whenever someone searches for CT, it appears that their X account is on the top search. I guess this is a better result now compared to few days ago that none of their social is coming out although on the 2nd result, it still shows CD and not CT's website.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: LTU_btc on November 16, 2025, 07:28:28 PM
When I find on Bitcointalk someone sharing news from a barely known news website, I always type the title in a search engine to check whether the same or similar news is published by other famous news websites. Recently I noticed that I no longer see a result from Cointelegraph in Google. Today, I tried to type Cointelegraph.com in Google's search engine and I didn't get any result. Did Google completely remove Cointelegraph from its search engine? That's strange, Google hasn't removed torrent websites from its search engine and what issue did they have with Cointelegraph?

Looks like cointelegraph SEO dropped and maybe this is the reason on why they can't be found when people search them on google.

I also  tried to use microsoft bing and their site show up at top the same as what @crwth shown.

https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/11/13/UPHe1f.

Also if you used brave you can see their site there.

So most likely there's an issue on their SEO that's why it didn't show up when we use google.


I think it has nothing to do with SEO. Even if you enter site:cointelegraph.com you won't get anything in search results. Don't know I'm using right term to call this situation, but it more looks like shadow ban from Google. You can like Cointelegraph or not, but such things from Google isn't something good.
BTW, does people actually use Bing as their main search engine? I remember trying it longtime ago and it was terrible so I never looked back.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: ABCbits on November 17, 2025, 08:19:03 AM
BTW, does people actually use Bing as their main search engine? I remember trying it longtime ago and it was terrible so I never looked back.

I actually use DuckDuckGo, where many of the search result comes from Bing[1]. The result is good enough for what i need, although i occasionally had to use google search when result i can't find what i look from on DuckDuckGo. I also notice more people use Edge (windows default browser) and Bing these days.

[1] https://duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/results/sources (https://duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/results/sources)


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: Pmalek on November 17, 2025, 08:42:19 AM
Google attacked the iGaming and betting sector last year and put many affiliate companies out of business because their content no longer ranked. Perhaps we are seeing more focus on crypto content with Google's recent core upgrades. What happened to Cointelegraph is probably the result of several things, including algorithmic changes but also a manual penalty of some sort. Whatever it was that Cointelegraph was doing, someone at Google considered it too dangerous, too spammy, and too unnatural.

I wonder if sites and companies impacted negatively by Google can ask the company for support and clarification on how to remove the shadow bans and de-rankings? Something tells me that Google wouldn't help in such cases and would only point to their rules.     


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: dkbit98 on November 17, 2025, 07:46:23 PM
Oh I am sure g00gle is just messing around with their algorithm again and they are increasing censorship yet again ::)
I don't follow Cointelegraph or any other crypto news website specifically, but you can probably sign up to newsletter on their website.
It's also a good idea to use some alternative search engine, maybe brave search, qwant, startpage, etc.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: shield132 on November 18, 2025, 12:30:53 PM
I think it has nothing to do with SEO. Even if you enter site:cointelegraph.com you won't get anything in search results. Don't know I'm using right term to call this situation, but it more looks like shadow ban from Google. You can like Cointelegraph or not, but such things from Google isn't something good.
BTW, does people actually use Bing as their main search engine? I remember trying it longtime ago and it was terrible so I never looked back.
Are you sure? I type site:cointelegraph.com and I can see Cointelegraph and its subdomains in Google's search engine but I can't see anything besides subdomains. Here is the screen btw.
https://talkimg.com/images/2025/11/18/UPf2IC.png

I actually use DuckDuckGo, where many of the search result comes from Bing[1]. The result is good enough for what i need, although i occasionally had to use google search when result i can't find what i look from on DuckDuckGo. I also notice more people use Edge (windows default browser) and Bing these days.

[1] https://duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/results/sources (https://duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/results/sources)
I don't use DuckDuckGo because it never gives me good search results. First of all, there aren't local websites in DuckDuckGo but there are global ones, which is good for English information but it gives very bad results even for English information. Google is still the best choice to my mind.

Oh I am sure g00gle is just messing around with their algorithm again and they are increasing censorship yet again ::)
Google is definitely messing up with their algorithm. I asked Google's Gemini about it and as it told me, Google has de-indexed Cointelegraph's pages from Google's search engine and the probable cause is that Google's algoriwth prioritizes E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness). The crypto media has a low E-E-A-T according to Google.
Btw if this is true, then there shouldn't be Coindesk, Cryptonews, CNBC and other crypto news websites too.

I wonder how their Google Search Console looks like and why it takes them so long to fix this problem.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: avp2306 on November 18, 2025, 12:54:51 PM
Oh I am sure g00gle is just messing around with their algorithm again and they are increasing censorship yet again ::)
I don't follow Cointelegraph or any other crypto news website specifically, but you can probably sign up to newsletter on their website.
It's also a good idea to use some alternative search engine, maybe brave search, qwant, startpage, etc.


I think this is one of the reason on why that situation happened to cointelegraph SEO Manipulation Report: Allegations of Finixio and Clickout Media Exploiting CoinTelegraph’s Authority and Misleading Regulators (https://theholycoins.com/news/seo-manipulation-report-allegations-of-finixio-and-clickout-media-exploiting-cointelegraph-s)

Infairness to cointelegraph they are doing all those things they can especially for removing their Igaming content and also distancing their site to those blackhat SEO practices.

Looks like it will take lots of time before cointelegraph can fix the current issue they are facing.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: LTU_btc on November 18, 2025, 04:37:07 PM
Are you sure? I type site:cointelegraph.com and I can see Cointelegraph and its subdomains in Google's search engine but I can't see anything besides subdomains. Here is the screen btw.
https://talkimg.com/images/2025/11/18/UPf2IC.png
Yes, I'm sure because I checked it before posting, but now I see similar results like you got. Strange.

Quote
I don't use DuckDuckGo because it never gives me good search results. First of all, there aren't local websites in DuckDuckGo but there are global ones, which is good for English information but it gives very bad results even for English information. Google is still the best choice to my mind.
Yeah, that's probably main reason why I also don't use DuckDuckGo. It's ok when you're using it in English, but when you try to use it in different language, it's difficult to find what you're looking for.

I also notice more people use Edge (windows default browser) and Bing these days.

[1] https://duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/results/sources (https://duckduckgo.com/duckduckgo-help-pages/results/sources)
Didn't knew that, for me it seems that probably 99% of people use Chrome nowadays and Edge sounds like very niche browser.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: albon on November 18, 2025, 06:43:35 PM
I think this is one of the reason on why that situation happened to cointelegraph SEO Manipulation Report: Allegations of Finixio and Clickout Media Exploiting CoinTelegraph’s Authority and Misleading Regulators (https://theholycoins.com/news/seo-manipulation-report-allegations-of-finixio-and-clickout-media-exploiting-cointelegraph-s)

Infairness to cointelegraph they are doing all those things they can especially for removing their Igaming content and also distancing their site to those blackhat SEO practices.

Looks like it will take lots of time before cointelegraph can fix the current issue they are facing.
What the Cointelegraph team did constitutes numerous violations of Google's policies.. If they cared about keeping their website at the top they would have adhered to Google's policies and avoided violating them. The cloaking technique they used was as the article mentioned, one of the main reasons their site disappeared from the search engine, along with manipulative SEO tactics.

Cointelegraph was one of the strong platforms I regularly followed for news and content, and I didn't notice what happened to them in the search engine because I had their website bookmarked and didn’t need to search for it.

I advise everyone to do the same, as phishing sites impersonating them might appear in the search results during their absence. It's also good that many alternatives crypto-news platforms are available in the search engine, so I don't see what happened as an obstacle for the cryptocurrency community.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: AakZaki on November 19, 2025, 09:27:55 AM
I found information related to Cointelegraph in my local language Indonesian. The News published on June 23, 2025, stated that the Cointelegraph website had been hacked, that the front end of the website had been compromised.
It also stated that the Cointelegraph advertising system contained malicious code.
Then, thinking that it would be easier for my friends here to read, I also looked for information. I searched for the English version and found similar News here.
https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2025/06/23/coinmarketcap-cointelegraph-compromised-to-serve-pop-ups-to-drain-crypto-wallets/

It seems that this is also the cause or Google deliberately set a limit so that it is not visited for the safety of many people.


Title: Re: What happened to Shittelegraph?
Post by: Lucius on November 19, 2025, 03:48:27 PM
For me it's not bad news at all - because I haven't forgotten how they paid shills to spam their links on this forum. Besides, their portal is full of clickbait headlines, half-truths, and all sorts of nonsense, so I don't even understand what people are looking for there? It's not that there aren't other sources from which you can get information in a much better and more professional way.


Title: Re: What happened to Shittelegraph?
Post by: ultrloa on November 20, 2025, 10:26:21 PM
For me it's not bad news at all - because I haven't forgotten how they paid shills to spam their links on this forum. Besides, their portal is full of clickbait headlines, half-truths, and all sorts of nonsense, so I don't even understand what people are looking for there? It's not that there aren't other sources from which you can get information in a much better and more professional way.

And that is part of the illegal practices they made that's why its not surprising to see them experiencing this issue.

But still its important for people to know this situation happened, so they will not fall on phising sites. Since they might find those clone sites offering giveaway if they deposit certain amount which is classic schemes or even other things that can harm those vulnerable individual. Cointelegrap is somehow a big site and lots of people search their site to find latest news about crypto.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: FinneysTrueVision on November 21, 2025, 01:40:23 AM
Most of the crypto media today is clickbait and AI slop. Cointelegraph is far from being the worst actor when it comes to crypto news websites, but apparently they were doing something shady that went against Google’s rules.

The only part of their website that had some really interesting content was the Magazine subcategory. For everything else, you can get the same news on may other sites. I don’t think such a well known site will completely disappear just like that, but it may take a while before they are allowed back in search results.

I tried to see if they were also excluded from results in AI chatbots and the only one that had Cointelegraph was Grok, while Perplexity only showed results from their Facebook page.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: joniboini on November 21, 2025, 05:39:14 AM
I just found out from this thread that CT has issues. I guess that's natural, given that I no longer read news from their websites. It looks like Coindesk still appears on the first page, though. If anything, I noticed new websites that I had never seen before in Google search results when I typed in 'crypto news' or something similar. Can't comment on their quality, but it's probably the same quality as other crypto news. Heck, even a single unsourced tweet is reported these days.

I tried to see if they were also excluded from results in AI chatbots and the only one that had Cointelegraph was Grok, while Perplexity only showed results from their Facebook page.
Are they using gemma or other models? If it's gemma or anything related to Google, shouldn't that be expected?


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: coin-investor on November 22, 2025, 02:12:39 PM
I copied one of their headlines and pasted it into Google search; unfortunately, not even their headlines are showing up. This isn't good from the advertiser’s perspective; they only consider platforms with a strong search engine presence, because these visitors are targeted. 
Whatever happened to their search engine ranking, their webmasters should fix it as early as possible, or people will forget what Cointelegraph is and may look for other alternatives.


Title: Re: What happened to Shittelegraph?
Post by: shield132 on November 23, 2025, 08:49:21 PM
For me it's not bad news at all - because I haven't forgotten how they paid shills to spam their links on this forum. Besides, their portal is full of clickbait headlines, half-truths, and all sorts of nonsense, so I don't even understand what people are looking for there? It's not that there aren't other sources from which you can get information in a much better and more professional way.
Did they really pay money to shills to spam their links on Bitcointalk? I'm on this forum since 2016 but I've been visiting it since probably 2013-2014, I've never noticed anyone wearing a Cointelegraph's signature. I've noticed that few people have been opening threads with Cointelegraph's articles but I've never thought those were paid posts.

To be fair, I completely agree with you, Cointelegraph is full of clickbait and half-truths but it was the first crypto news website that I discovered in my crypto journey and it became a habit for me to visit it. It's also a widely known crypto news website. I hugely dislike some of their content, especially their market analysis, because 90% of the time it's completely wrong and they change their mind in the next analysis like it was nothing.


Title: Re: What happened to Shittelegraph?
Post by: Lucius on November 24, 2025, 03:10:58 PM
Did they really pay money to shills to spam their links on Bitcointalk? I'm on this forum since 2016 but I've been visiting it since probably 2013-2014, I've never noticed anyone wearing a Cointelegraph's signature. I've noticed that few people have been opening threads with Cointelegraph's articles but I've never thought those were paid posts.
~snip~


There were no sig campaigns, but they paid people who spammed their links, especially in the Press board - and one of them publicly admitted that he was paid to do that. I often see posts that contain their link, but honestly I haven't checked whether someone is doing it systematically or just has a habit of visiting that portal like you.

You may know about Bitcoinmagazine (https://bitcoinmagazine.com/), but if you don't, I think it's a good alternative for news from the world of cryptocurrency.


Title: Re: What happened to Shittelegraph?
Post by: avp2306 on November 25, 2025, 10:59:25 AM
Did they really pay money to shills to spam their links on Bitcointalk? I'm on this forum since 2016 but I've been visiting it since probably 2013-2014, I've never noticed anyone wearing a Cointelegraph's signature. I've noticed that few people have been opening threads with Cointelegraph's articles but I've never thought those were paid posts.
~snip~


There were no sig campaigns, but they paid people who spammed their links, especially in the Press board - and one of them publicly admitted that he was paid to do that. I often see posts that contain their link, but honestly I haven't checked whether someone is doing it systematically or just has a habit of visiting that portal like you.

You may know about Bitcoinmagazine (https://bitcoinmagazine.com/), but if you don't, I think it's a good alternative for news from the world of cryptocurrency.

I didn't know about those actions they made in this forum, but looking at what they do towards SEO exploitation they have done before it seems that those things has really a basis that's why Cointelegraph now suffering from the penalties given by google to them.

Cointelegraph decline traffic badly decline as what we can see here Cointelegraph Traffic Collapse (https://morningtick.com/post/cointelegraph-traffic-collapse-google-penalty/) last October as the effect of this situation happens to them

Bitcoinmagazine is indeed a great alternative aside from cointelegraph since they are also good source information.



Title: Re: What happened to Shittelegraph?
Post by: shield132 on November 26, 2025, 08:59:01 AM
You may know about Bitcoinmagazine (https://bitcoinmagazine.com/), but if you don't, I think it's a good alternative for news from the world of cryptocurrency.
I've heard Bitcoinmanagine but I was never their user. I'm mostly visiting to decrypt.co, coindesk and cointelegraph. Btw do you remember CCN? In 2017 it became very popular and then it quickly faded away.

I didn't know about those actions they made in this forum, but looking at what they do towards SEO exploitation they have done before it seems that those things has really a basis that's why Cointelegraph now suffering from the penalties given by google to them.
What did they do to exploit SEO? Were they doing blackhat seo? I highly doubt that they were buying guest posts and other types of backlinks. Btw it's very strange that company, that probably gets half of its traffic from Google, doesn't make a public announcement about what happened to them in Google and despite the fact that months have passed, a company with hundreds of employees still hasn't fixed the problem. I wonder who is their SEO specialist and why there is no action from them.

P.S. Guys, please don't post here if you don't have any important news regarding Cointelegraph.


Title: Re: What happened to Shittelegraph?
Post by: Lucius on November 26, 2025, 02:08:10 PM
I've heard Bitcoinmanagine but I was never their user. I'm mostly visiting to decrypt.co, coindesk and cointelegraph. Btw do you remember CCN? In 2017 it became very popular and then it quickly faded away.
~snip~


I remember that news portal, especially since its name reminded me of a popular US portal/TV channel. Decrypt is also a good source of information, I sometimes read a good article there. Honestly, I don't see much point in reading more than two such portals, because realistically, when you look at it, they mostly like repetitive content, but you just have to determine who is the fastest in publishing the article. Websites that have one or two authors can hardly compete with those that have 5+ authors.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: Zwei on November 26, 2025, 06:02:36 PM
I didn't know about those actions they made in this forum, but looking at what they do towards SEO exploitation they have done before it seems that those things has really a basis that's why Cointelegraph now suffering from the penalties given by google to them.

Cointelegraph decline traffic badly decline as what we can see here Cointelegraph Traffic Collapse (https://morningtick.com/post/cointelegraph-traffic-collapse-google-penalty/) last October as the effect of this situation happens to them
they fucked around with all the gambling affiliates spam shit and found out.
and if my memory is not failing me, last year google went after authority websites that were gaming the ranking by sposored articles filled with affiliates links.

this entire thing should remind people whose business model depends on google traffic, you are 100% at their mercy, one algorithm update or a penalty and you are fucked.

What did they do to exploit SEO? Were they doing blackhat seo? I highly doubt that they were buying guest posts and other types of backlinks.
my guess is all the gambling affiliates spam they had, i mean, if that wasn't what got them here, they would not have nuked off their website. that's the only explanation i can think of with the info we have.

I wonder who is their SEO specialist and why there is no action from them.
cointelegraph probably fired him, lol.


Title: Re: What happened to Shittelegraph?
Post by: avp2306 on November 27, 2025, 07:33:25 AM
I didn't know about those actions they made in this forum, but looking at what they do towards SEO exploitation they have done before it seems that those things has really a basis that's why Cointelegraph now suffering from the penalties given by google to them.
What did they do to exploit SEO? Were they doing blackhat seo? I highly doubt that they were buying guest posts and other types of backlinks. Btw it's very strange that company, that probably gets half of its traffic from Google, doesn't make a public announcement about what happened to them in Google and despite the fact that months have passed, a company with hundreds of employees still hasn't fixed the problem. I wonder who is their SEO specialist and why there is no action from them.

P.S. Guys, please don't post here if you don't have any important news regarding Cointelegraph.
Yes they do that blackhat SEO schemes which involve iGaming and manipulative redirects.

They tried to fix their issue by cutting out their ties with exploitive partners and erase their gambling related contents.

But it seems they struggle to solve that issue because the problem is not technical but rather their reputation on Google has been damage, that's why they still experiencing these issues. This case now is up to Google now if there's re-evaluation happens. Also if cointelegraph can maintain their site clean maybe by this time Google will return everything back to normal.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: shield132 on November 29, 2025, 09:19:26 AM
they fucked around with all the gambling affiliates spam shit and found out.
and if my memory is not failing me, last year google went after authority websites that were gaming the ranking by sposored articles filled with affiliates links.

this entire thing should remind people whose business model depends on google traffic, you are 100% at their mercy, one algorithm update or a penalty and you are fucked.
Which crypto casinos were they promoting? Btw aren't all of the crypto casino review websites full of sponsored articles filled with affiliate links? I checked casino guru and a few other similar websites, they aren't banned in the Google search engine.

P.S Update
I did deep research today about Cointelegraph and its effective removal from Google. Cointelegraph partnered with Clickout Media to manage the iGaming section on the website. Cointelegraph took advantage of its website's ranking and published third-party pages to abuse the search rankings of Clickout Media. Cointelegraph didn't become a victim of Google's algorithm update. Most likely, Google enforced Site Reputation Abuse violations against Cointelegraph through manual actions.

Despite the fact that they quickly removed iGaming from their website, they are still punished by Google.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: robelneo on November 29, 2025, 09:27:09 PM


P.S Update
I did deep research today about Cointelegraph and its effective removal from Google. Cointelegraph partnered with Clickout Media to manage the iGaming section on the website. Cointelegraph took advantage of its website's ranking and published third-party pages to abuse the search rankings of Clickout Media. Cointelegraph didn't become a victim of Google's algorithm update. Most likely, Google enforced Site Reputation Abuse violations against Cointelegraph through manual actions.

Despite the fact that they quickly removed iGaming from their website, they are still punished by Google.
Thanks for digging deep on this. Many website administrators will learn to avoid this kind of action if they do not want to be punished by Google.
If you're business is not respected by Google, and they are punishing you, you will lose a lot of your reputation. It's better to appeal to have the punishment removed.
Now they have to rely heavily on their followers and subscribers for their traffic, and they need to be included in the search results to gain organic traffic.


Title: Re: What happened to Cointelegraph?
Post by: Zwei on November 29, 2025, 10:52:12 PM
they fucked around with all the gambling affiliates spam shit and found out.
and if my memory is not failing me, last year google went after authority websites that were gaming the ranking by sposored articles filled with affiliates links.

this entire thing should remind people whose business model depends on google traffic, you are 100% at their mercy, one algorithm update or a penalty and you are fucked.
Which crypto casinos were they promoting? Btw aren't all of the crypto casino review websites full of sponsored articles filled with affiliate links? I checked casino guru and a few other similar websites, they aren't banned in the Google search engine.
the deferent is that those are 100% affiliate websites, they post their own affiliate links, that their main business model.
what other authority websites like cointelegraph and a bunch of other did, is they sold sponsored articles/listicles for like $1~3k that a third party writes and have their affiliate links.

2 years ago or so, if you would search anything on google like best casino, best vpn, best whatever, the top results would have always been from a big authority websites, and google didn't like that so they put a stop to it with a spam update.