February 26, 2026
18 min read
We recomputed web-server market share and per-server quality across 3.17 million sites with a detected Server header in LLMSE's 3.4M-URL index. Apache leads at 29.2%, nginx follows at 26.3%, and Cloudflare is third at 19.6% — the big three still hold ~75%. But quality tracks the platform, not the protocol: modern deploy platforms (Vercel, Netlify) pass SEO ~5x more often than the legacy stack, website builders win accessibility, LiteSpeed is the WordPress server, and Cloudflare carries 7x the gambling traffic of Apache or nginx. Your server predicts your quality because it proxies who built the site.
February 26, 2026
15 min read
We classified 3.15 million URLs by content sentiment: 90.1% are Good, 9.2% Neutral, and just 0.75% Bad — 121 positive URLs for every negative one. The web is overwhelmingly positive, but the negative share has more than doubled since first publication. Negativity clusters predictably (Adult, Czech-language sites) and is the least accessible content on the web — yet 72% of it is still brand-safe, which is why filtering ad inventory on tone over-blocks safe inventory.
February 25, 2026
21 min read
We graded twelve CMS and web platforms — from WordPress's 1.06M-site empire to Ghost's niche — across six quality dimensions using LLMSE's 3.4M-URL index. Shopify now tops trust (91.8%), readability (52.5%), AEO (6.0%), and privacy (76.9%); static generators lead SEO and accessibility; Joomla collapses on discovery. WordPress beats the web average on every dimension yet leads none — it is the median platform. CMS choice predicts the shape of a site's quality, not whether its SEO works.
February 25, 2026
18 min read
We cross-referenced 3.1 million classified URLs across 17 content languages against SEO, AEO, EEAT, WCAG accessibility, readability, privacy, and sentiment grades. Dutch sites carry the strongest trust signals — ahead of English. Vietnamese sites have the best SEO. Japanese builds the most accessible web. And cross-language readability scores are a measurement artifact, not a ranking. Here's the data, refreshed against an index that has more than doubled.
February 25, 2026
16 min read
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
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.