Well that is debatable since we don't know how search engines work for ranking they are highly protected. If you have a art business or a carpentry site like mine and someone searches for an image of say a mantel you won't have your images in that result. That means any image used inside RSD will not get picked up and used for any image index search, they don't see them. Those larger images are what you see on the page, but search engines only index the initial src image which in our case is the base64. Which is the larger image real image you use and those can be set up to load different sized images in responsive design for the grid size. That is a fast loading very tiny image which makes the page download faster, then once the page loads it goes to the srcset. In RSD the code is written to an image by using an src to a base64 gif. ![]() Since the fantastic help from Scott is no longer around perhaps some other representive from Coffeecup may like to also weigh in, but this is my humble take on it.Īn image has a link that is indexed by search engines from it's src (source) or it's href (hypertext reference). How that effects SEO for the main site though is debatable. If you have a business or site that has images that are important to you that they get indexed for IMAGE SEARCH than you should be aware that the way RSD uses the srcset they will not get picked up and shown by search engines.
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