Twitter’s new rate limits severely affect the indexing and display of tweets on Google’s search engine, limiting the reach of the information shared on the microblogging site.

According to web search industry outlet Search Engine Land, Google Search has dropped more than half of the indexed URLs from Twitter over the past few days.

On July 3, the outlet noted the number of search engine saturation from Twitter results had dropped by more than 60% to around 180 million tweets indexed by the search company.

On July 4, The Verge shared a statement from a Google spokesperson who said “We’re aware that our ability to crawl Twitter.com has been limited, affecting our ability to display tweets and pages from the site in search results.”

SEO consultant Glen Gabe posted a decline in search visibility from Twitter accounts. “This is based on Google not being able to crawl those URLs (due to Twitter redirecting non-logged-in users),” he explained.

Technologist Barry Schwartz also carried out a few tests noting a similar drop-off in indexed tweets.

When tested by EdaFace, Google returned about 665 million results when searching “site:twitter.com” so the figure is seemingly dynamic and dependent on Google’s crawlers.

On July 2, Twitter executive chairman Elon Musk controversially imposed temporary limits on the number of posts users will be allowed to read daily citing “extreme levels of data scraping and system manipulation.”

Related: Twitter suspends memecoin-linked AI bot after Elon Musk’s ‘scam crypto’ claim

The move has been largely criticized by the crypto community which relies heavily on Twitter to communicate and share information. Lower tweet visibility on Google would also reduce the amount of crypto-related content originating from Twitter.

Decentralized Twitter rival Mastodon has recently seen a surge in activity with an increase in active users since read restrictions were imposed on Twitter.

A Twitter rival from the Meta-owned Instagram called Threads is also set for launch this week.

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