Are We Overdoing It with Meta Tags in 2025?

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Asked By CuriousWanderer42 On

It seems like web development in 2025 could do better than piling up all these repetitive meta tags in the section. I'm noticing a lot of overlap, like the same image, description, and favicon appearing in multiple places. It feels pretty inefficient. Is there any hope for change on this front? Are there any initiatives in progress to address this issue?

5 Answers

Answered By OldSchoolCoder On

Totally agree! The redundancy in meta tags seems like an outdated practice from the early SEO days. It’s bloated and unnecessary now. It would be fantastic to see a new standard that cuts down on this repetition—it’s definitely overdue.

Answered By DataPrivacyDude On

The struggle with meta tags in 2025 is that they're often controlled by big AI companies looking to gather your data. When you describe your content, you’re just making it easier for them.

MetaCritic88 -

Yeah, but if you want your content to reach a wider audience through ads and social media, you kind of have to give them something to work with.

Answered By TechSavvyNerd99 On

Good news! Safari 26, launching soon, will finally support SVG favicons, so there's a bit of progress on that front.

Answered By SchemaFanatic On

Consider using JSON-LD instead of traditional meta tags! It allows you to describe your content in a structured way using JSON, which is way more manageable.

Answered By OptimizationGuru On

What problem are we actually trying to fix? It seems like you’re pointing out how people misused these tags rather than how they’re actually coded. Meta and open graph tags are super handy—they provide a way to show link previews, which is really useful. Sure, there are alternatives like APIs, but that’s a lot more complicated than just having the data in the HTML.

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