R Link Explorer New Review
By: Digital Insights Team
If you have spent any time in the world of Search Engine Optimization (SEO), you know that backlinks are the currency of the internet. For nearly a decade, professionals have relied on Moz’s (formerly Open Site Explorer) to audit their link profiles and spy on competitors. r link explorer new
response <- GET(url, add_headers(Authorization = paste("Bearer", YOUR_NEW_API_KEY)), query = query) data <- fromJSON(content(response, "text")) print(data$fresh_links) By: Digital Insights Team If you have spent
library(httr) library(jsonlite) url <- "https://api.moz.com/v2/link/explorer" No major update is without bugs
Note: The "new" API returns data in under 2 seconds, compared to the 10-second delay of the legacy API. No major update is without bugs. Here is how to solve the most common complaints about the R Link Explorer new :
If you have been avoiding the update because the interface looks different, stop hesitating. The old tool is deprecated. Spend 30 minutes in the version setting up your "Lost & Found" alerts, and watch your organic traffic recover from links you didn't even know you had lost.