Posts tagged "content-quality"

3 posts found.

February 25, 2026 13 min read

Who Writes for Humans? Shopping Writes the Web's Clearest Prose — and the Regulated Sectors the Murkiest

We measured readability across LLMSE's index of 3.4 million classified URLs with the Flesch Reading Ease formula. Shopping writes the clearest prose (51.6% pass); the regulated, high-stakes sectors — Finance (39.2%), Health (25.5%), and Law & Government (17.3%, the worst on the web) — run mid-pack to dead last. Only 32.8% of pages pass, and the median page reads at college level. The original post's curated 27-site ranking has been dropped for aggregate analysis, and its 'Finance writes the clearest prose' claim corrected.

February 25, 2026 16 min read

The Gender Skew of the Web: 55% of Content Targets Men, but Female-Targeted Content Scores Higher on Trust

We classified 3.36 million sites by target-audience gender and cross-referenced them with 58 content categories and six quality dimensions. 55% of gender-tagged web content targets men and 27.5% targets women — yet female-targeted content scores markedly higher on trust (EEAT 52.7% vs 43.7%), privacy, and brand safety. Two original claims are corrected: the male accessibility edge and the male 'Bad'-sentiment gap have both vanished.

February 24, 2026 13 min read

E-E-A-T Scores by Industry: Why 47% of the Web Is Stuck at a D

We cross-referenced 3.36 million EEAT-graded URLs against LLMSE's category index. The web's trust problem isn't mass failure — only 7.3% of sites score F — it's mass mediocrity: 47.3% land at grade D, the single largest band. Shopping leads industries with a 75.4% pass rate; Computer & Electronics, the sector that builds the web, trails every consumer category at 20.3%, with 77% of its sites stuck at D.