Go look at a decade+ old webpage. So many of the links to specific resources (as in, not just a link to a domain name with no path) simply don't work anymore.
That would come off far less user hostile than this move while still achieving the goal of trimming truly unnecessary bloat from their database. It also doesn't require you to keep track of how often a link is followed, which incurs its own small cost.
I'm completely serious, and I have a PhD thesis with such links to back it up. Just in some foootnotes, but still.
Yes, maybe this shows how naive we were/I was. But it definitely also shows how deep Google has fallen, that it had so much trust and completely betrayed it.
Maybe for ads in periodicals or other content where accessing the link isn't going to matter down the line, but absolutely not in a document that is expected to be useful years down the line. It's already enough of a problem dealing with link rot without adding another stage of rotting redirections to the mix.
> After all, Google would never destroy those URLs, and the company will likely outlive us.
I will give you that Google URL shortener came out in 2009 and the "Google Graveyard" didn't really pick up speed until 2011 but I feel like any thoughts of "the company will likely outlive us" no matter what company should have been dead after 2008.
> I'm completely serious, and I have a PhD thesis with such links to back it up. Just in some foootnotes, but still. > Yes, maybe this shows how naive we were/I was. But it definitely also shows how deep Google has fallen, that it had so much trust and completely betrayed it.
I would absolutely agree that was a naive choice. A shortened URL could still be useful in a long-lived document as a convenience measure for fitting the link in to a page of content and/or humans copying it to a device, but the full link should then be placed at the end of the chapter or document so it's still discoverable when the shortener eventually disappears.
The only exception I'd be willing to grant is for where the referenced content and the shortened URL are hosted by the same company, for example many programming books have a printed URL at the publisher's site for accessing errata, examples, etc. which is itself a redirect to a deeper link on the publisher's site. In that case those hosting the redirect have an actual interest in the target content being accessible.
Then, even as that was eroding, they were still seen as reliable, IIRC.
The killedbygoogle reputation was more recent. And still I think isn't common knowledge among non-techies.
And even today, if you ask a techie which companies have certain reliability capabilities, Google would be at the top of some lists (e.g., keeping certain sites running under massive demand, and securing data against attackers).