March 30, 2026
14 min read
We analyzed 388,000 HTTP requests across 8,974 unique user agents. Less than half the traffic comes from humans. Here's the full breakdown by platform, browser, OS, and crawler type.
March 12, 2026
7 min read
We graded 148,000+ websites on privacy compliance. 59% failed outright. Here's what the data reveals about consent banners, tracking scripts, and who's actually protecting user data.
March 09, 2026
12 min read
We analyzed 123,262 websites across government, education, and healthcare — the three sectors most affected by the ADA Title II web accessibility deadline on April 24, 2026. Only 33.6% pass WCAG. Education has the worst failure rate at 34.9%. University websites pass at just 30.7%. With 46 days until the deadline and 5,500+ projected accessibility lawsuits in 2026, two-thirds of the public-serving web isn't ready.
March 09, 2026
13 min read
We analyzed 16,213 children's websites — from early childhood education to kids' shopping to children's TV — across WCAG accessibility, EEAT trust, readability, GARM brand safety, and tracking technology adoption. 69.5% fail basic accessibility checks. Children's clothing sites have an 11.8% WCAG pass rate and a 58.8% failure rate. Virtually no children's sites (0.01%) use a consent management platform. With the COPPA 2.0 compliance deadline 44 days away and five states enforcing age-appropriate design codes, the children's web is not ready.
March 09, 2026
15 min read
We analyzed 461 STEM websites — from NASA and CERN to Khan Academy and IEEE — across SEO, EEAT, WCAG, readability, and GARM brand safety dimensions. STEM sites have the highest trust scores on the internet: 50.7% pass EEAT, more than double the web average of 24.5%. But they are also the least readable: only 11.7% pass readability, one-third the web average. Engineering websites have a 0% readability pass rate. The organizations that advance human knowledge can't communicate it clearly on the web.
March 05, 2026
11 min read
We analyzed 180,432 websites across 29 industries for AI citation readiness using AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) grades. Only 2.7% pass. Gambling leads at 16.9% while Music, Events, and Reference score near zero. 97.3% of the web is structurally invisible to AI answer engines. The industries investing in citation-ready content today will own the zero-click future. Everyone else is optimizing for a search paradigm that's already disappearing.
March 02, 2026
9 min read
We ranked 16 industries across SEO, EEAT, WCAG accessibility, and readability using aggregate data from over 1 million graded websites. Sports leads SEO. Health leads EEAT. Computer & Electronics leads accessibility. Shopping leads readability. Law & Government has the widest gap: best WCAG accessibility but worst readability at 19.2%. Every sector has a blind spot. Here's the data.
March 02, 2026
7 min read
We analyzed 39,815 news and media websites across SEO, EEAT, WCAG accessibility, and readability grades. Only 1.6% pass SEO. Newspapers lead trust at 62.2% EEAT but fail accessibility at 35.0% WCAG. Sports news has the best SEO (7.0%) and readability (60.7%) but worst accessibility (22.2%). WordPress powers 42% of news sites and outperforms Medium on every quality metric. The platform that publishes the world's information has a quality problem it hasn't solved.
March 02, 2026
9 min read
We analyzed 3,224 websites with detected payment providers and cross-referenced them with SEO, EEAT, WCAG, server, DNS, and mail infrastructure data. PayPal sites are 69% gambling. Stripe sites run on nginx and enterprise DNS. Square sites serve traditional businesses on Apache. Your payment provider choice correlates with your entire infrastructure profile — and your quality grades.
March 01, 2026
14 min read
We analyzed 160,000+ websites across 15 JavaScript frameworks, static site generators, and CMS platforms, then cross-referenced them with SEO, EEAT, WCAG, and readability grades. Ghost blogs have a 10.4% SEO pass rate — 5x the web average. React sites have the best WCAG accessibility but the worst SEO. And jQuery — still on 113,000 sites — underperforms everywhere.