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Why Pages with Over 90% Originality Are Still Judged as “Low Quality”

Author: Don jiang

Original ≠ Quality: If user dwell time is less than 20 seconds, bounce rate exceeds 80%, and there are no case studies or data support (information increment below 30%), even with 90%+ originality, pages will still be flagged as low quality.

Failing to Meet Search Intent

Are You Giving Users What They Actually Want?

A Manhattan office worker opens Safari browser at 2:30 AM. She types “Bose QC45 blinking red light” looking for headphone troubleshooting. Google flips through 32 billion webpages in 0.42 seconds to find answers.

The top-ranked page displays a static table on pure white background. The visible text totals just 78 ordinary English words. The 65th-ranked page is packed with 4,500 words of pure manually typed review text. Above it hangs a 9-minute HD stereo video.

The long article details the noise-cancellation decibel data of headphones tested in Boston’s acoustic lab. The backend records the user’s actions at 2:30 AM: page loads in 1.2 seconds, screen scroll distance 0 centimeters, dwell time 2.5 seconds. The visitor quickly hits the browser back button.

The Boston independent audio site owner notices the page bounce rate soaring to 92.4%. Over the past seven days, 1,300 late-night visitors searching the same query opened the long article and fled. The algorithm crawls Chrome browser protocol records and captures massive departure actions.

The famous repair forum iFixit provides a single unadorned sentence. Long-press the left Bluetooth pairing button for 15 seconds until the white LED indicator flashes twice to reset the device. That laboriously written 4,500-word article gets kicked out of the top search results.

Something changes during the Black Friday promotional season every November. Amazon Seattle data center servers endure 47,000 queries per second. The search box characters become “OLED TV under 1000 dollars.”

The backend filters out long dissertations about LCD panel light-emitting chemistry principles. The computer screen neatly排列带有4.8颗星级评分的商品图文卡片。旁边清晰标着15%折扣划线价。

34% of visitors linger 14 minutes on a page with a yellow “Add to Cart” button. Visitors successfully complete credit card authorization. The system backend sets fixed display modules based on tens of millions of historical transaction records:

  • $5 off coupon popup
  • FedEx delivery within 72 hours prompt
  • 3-year limited extended warranty purchase option

The New York State DMV appointment queue diversion system receives 150,000 online visit requests daily. A large portion of visitors only type the three letters “DMV” into the interface. A San Jose, California service agency writes an 8,000-word comprehensive guide to renewing driver’s licenses.

The complete revised California Vehicle Code Section 42 is embedded verbatim in the middle of the text. The all-manual ultra-long text is banished to page 14’s no-man’s-land. The machine detects that people searching for DMV abbreviations desperately want a pure blue hyperlink entrance.

An Oxford University history sophomore searching for final paper materials inputs “French Revolution causes.” The search interface instantly filters out travel agency promotional pages selling Versailles Palace tour tickets. A pure text Wikipedia page containing 124 cited reference anchor links ranks at the very top.

The college student spends 11 minutes and 45 seconds reading on this page without any fancy animations. A grayscale pie chart of 18th-century French wheat price fluctuations embedded in the page is hovered over by mouse 7 times. After typing “PDF” in uppercase letters at the end of the search query, the page layout dramatically changes.

The Wikipedia with deep blue hyperlinks gets pushed to the bottom. The top three positions are replaced by Harvard University Digital Library’s old document archives with 1998 scan watermarks. Visitors press Ctrl+S on their keyboards at the 3-second mark to save the 4.2MB encrypted electronic archive.

Interface layout reactions to modified common suffix keywords:

  • Adding “review” calls up Trustpilot five-star rating plugin
  • Adding “near me” calls up Google Maps 5km GPS interface
  • Adding “template” generates Excel blank spreadsheet download button

How Search Engines Make Judgments

A housewife in East London stares at a broken Bosch washing machine on Saturday morning. She types “Bosch Series 6 error code E18” in the search box on her iPhone 13. Ten blue-underlined links pop up on screen. The first-ranked result is a beautifully designed appliance repair blog.

This blog post is packed with 3,200 words of purely hand-written appliance maintenance essay. The author spends four paragraphs reminiscing about buying their first Bosch washing machine in 1995. The text is interspersed with three 4K-resolution photos of the washing machine’s exterior. At the bottom of the page, the seven letters indicating a clogged drain pump are barely mentioned.

The visitor swipes twice quickly on the glass screen. Her eyes search for bold text containing the characters “E” and “18” in the long essay. After 6.5 seconds, she finds no useful repair instructions. One finger presses the back arrow icon in the upper left corner of Safari browser.

Google’s Dallas server center faithfully records the brief 6.5 seconds. The machine marks the action of returning to the previous search results page as Pogo-sticking bounce. Within the past 24 hours, 840 visitors performed exactly the same back action on that webpage. Massive negative feedback numbers trigger the red alert in the algorithm system.

The machine algorithm continuously crawls extremely precise human-computer interaction metrics:

  • Seconds counted from page load completion
  • Exact percentage of screen scroll depth
  • Finger or mouse cursor hover distribution on screen
  • Countdown of time difference when pressing back button

The machine has vastly different detection time thresholds for different reading devices. A 6.1-inch phone screen accommodates approximately 300 English characters per screen. If a visitor scrolls three screens on mobile without finding a list with clear step-by-step instructions, the system shortens the time threshold for non-qualification to under four seconds.

A 27-inch Dell monitor fills the desk’s line of sight. Eye tracker collects eye focus heatmaps distributed across the upper-left F-shaped area of the screen. Large blocks of dense text without line spacing cause eye muscle fatigue. Long articles that fail to extract short sentences easily trigger mouse movement toward the upper right corner.

The fourth-ranked webpage comes from an extremely simple appliance repair enthusiast forum. The entire webpage has only a lonely 150 English words. A 28-second non-HD phone video is centered on the page. The camera lens zooms in on the circular plastic cover in the lower right corner of the washing machine.

The housewife watches the video for ten seconds. She finds a two-pence coin to unscrew that plastic cover and drains the dirty water inside. This visitor stays on the simple webpage for a full four and a half minutes. Within 270 seconds, there is no trace of any back button press.

The Dallas data center servers compare the two completely different visitor time archives. The florid 3,200-word long article gets tagged with a red negative label. The crude 28-second video page climbs up the ranking. The next morning, the video稳稳坐在了搜索结果的首位。

A Silicon Valley software company programmer typing “Python list index out of range” while debugging code errors. He’s desperately looking for the line of code example that caused the program crash. Ranking at the top is a nearly 5,000-word long-form text about programming language development history.

The Hotjar heatmap monitoring plugin embedded in the webpage records mouse pointer movement trajectories. The red cursor scans back and forth on the first screen of the long article for 1.5 seconds. The gray scrollbar on the right side of the screen is vigorously yanked to the bottom. The programmer makes no text copy-paste operations.

The digital traces left by webpage interaction reveal the true situation of information asymmetry:

  • Text selection highlight area remains at zero
  • Hyperlink click count records all at zero
  • Page dwell time far below the three-second threshold
  • Ctrl+F page search shortcut used four times

The 99% pure manual typing score from originality detection tools loses effectiveness before millisecond-level records. Web crawlers no longer care how exquisite the rhetorical techniques in the text are. The system delegates judgment to the restless mortal bodies in front of screens. Human mouse operations determine webpage rankings.

An SEO data analysis agency in Austin, Texas retrieved 4.5 million traffic reports. Pages with long text blocks have an average churn rate as high as 78.5%. Visitors facing dense text are eager to reduce reading time. People expect a chart or a string of numbers in an extremely short time.

The action instructions for modifying webpage layout are very clear:

  • Move answer to first screen visible area
  • Delete first 500 words of environmental setup fluff
  • Provide a guide screenshot with red circle markers
  • Reduce steps to within five very short sentences

Three Major Misconceptions

A Chicago photographer parks a Honda Civic outside Best Buy. He uses his right thumb to type “Sony A7M4 vs Canon R6 Mark II” on his phone screen while sitting in the driver’s seat. A Visa credit card with $3,000 remaining credit sits on the passenger seat. He’s desperately looking for mechanical shutter continuous shooting test data for both full-frame mirrorless cameras.

A 6,000-word chronicle of DSLR camera development history pops up. The Chicago photographer is forced to read physics theories about how mirrorless camera CMOS sensors capture light waves. A purchase page with a yellow shopping cart checkout icon is pushed to the 14th position on page 2. All he wants is a cold set of test numbers.

The hard drive at a San Francisco data center contains a data table with 90,000 webpage demotion records. 41% of pure manual long articles fall into the trap of writing purchase requests as educational text. Visitors reaching for their wallets to swipe $2,000 have no interest in reading lengthy treatises when they’re ready to pay. They urgently need a neatly formatted two-column horizontal comparison list.

Physical Parameters Sony A7M4 Canon R6 II
Retail Price $2,498 $2,499
Body Weight 658g 670g
Effective Pixels 33 megapixels 24.2 megapixels
Focus Response 0.02 seconds 0.05 seconds
Burst Buffer 828 RAW frames 1000 RAW frames
Battery Life 580 shots 760 shots

The six sets of Arabic numerals in the table answer the Chicago photographer’s question in three seconds. Pure text long educational essays lose the ability to retain card-swiping consumers. On the evening of April 14th, rain falls steadily in Boston. A small repair shop owner urgently types “IRS tax payment portal” on a Dell computer.

Eight o’clock the next morning is the IRS tax filing deadline. Late payments incur penalties up to $250. The third-ranked accounting firm’s website provides a 4,500-word long tax knowledge article. The text meticulously records the complete congressional voting record of the 1986 Tax Reform Act.

The repair shop owner angrily pounds his solid wood desk while staring at dense black letters on screen. People searching for specific agency abbreviations crave minimalist webpage layout. Long historical materials block efficiency. Simplifying such webpage structure requires retaining only four specific display modules.

  • Pure blue login hyperlink with underline
  • Red button redirecting to official .gov domain
  • Reset channel entrance for forgotten password
  • 11-digit hands-free customer service phone number

The Boston repair shop owner gets completely lost in the 4,500-word article. He abandons searching for the tax payment entry after 14 seconds on the page. Two weeks of pure manual typing on the tax article gets mercilessly downgraded by the machine. Diluting single-line answers into long-winded explanations is the third way to destroy page rankings.

A University of Toronto freshman stands in the dormitory kitchen at 6:30 PM in front of an induction stove. Water in a 2-liter pot is boiling with white steam rising. He types “how long to boil angel hair pasta” in the search box. The webpage loads a 2,000-word Italian travel journal.

The first six paragraphs of the long article describe golden wheat stalks bathed in sunlight in Neapolitan wheat fields. The freshman scrolls his sweaty glass screen all the way to the 18th paragraph. His finger drags upward on the glass panel a full 15 centimeters. Buried in the text are three barely noticeable English letters: “3 minutes.”

Reading 600 words of useless introductory text adds 45 seconds of waiting agony for this freshman. Boiling water splashes onto the marble countertop with hissing sounds. Removing text bloat is extremely simple and straightforward.

  • Delete all weather and atmosphere descriptions from the first three paragraphs
  • Bold the three-minute pasta time and place it on the first line
  • Replace complex English spellings with Arabic numerals
  • Remove Wikipedia copy-paste paragraphs about dish origins

The long travel journal is judged as a discarded webpage that cannot answer pasta cooking time. The 3-minute short sentence composed of three English letters is the true request behind that search query.

Lacking Depth and Incremental Value

Only Skeleton, No Flesh

Open a webpage about coffee machines and all you see are numbers from the instruction manual. The author types “body weighs 5kg, water tank capacity 2 liters.” Visitors glance at the screen for less than 8 seconds then close the page. Someone who’s actually used the machine would stand in front of it with a stopwatch. Press the extraction button and wait 3.2 seconds for water to hit the coffee grounds. After making the third cup, water temperature drops from 92°C to 88°C, and pale liquid flows into the cup that tastes sour when drunk.

Articles that only copy external specifications are considered empty shells by machines. Readers spending $500 on an appliance want to know if morning warm-up takes 3 minutes or just 45 seconds.

Writing Style Details Included Visitor Dwell Time Bounce Rate
Copying manual “1.5L water tank” 12 seconds 89%
Hands-on testing “4th cup water temp drops to 86°C” 4 min 15 sec 31%

Appliance quality depends on stopwatches, shoes depend on feet to test. An article about running shoes that only says “mesh breathability, wear-resistant rubber” is meaningless. A reader puts them on and runs 10km on asphalt; by the 7th kilometer, the forefoot sole begins to heat up. For an 85kg person, after running 150km, the midsole foam compresses by 2.5mm. The arch support in the insole loses most of its rebound. The outsole rubber is actually only 1.2mm thick when measured with calipers.

Gravel can puncture the sole. Taking a photo with calipers pressed against the heel beats writing 10,000 words of empty shoe lightness praise. Calipers measure soles, growing plants need calendars. A plant care article with beautiful formatting teaches people to water daily and keep soil moist. Someone buys a Monstera at a New York apartment, waters it according to instructions for two weeks, and all leaf edges turn yellow.

The room is kept at a constant 22°C with 35% air humidity, and the drainage hole at the bottom of the pot is half-blocked by a plastic sheet. Someone who knows their stuff would write: insert your finger 2 inches into the soil, if it feels dry and doesn’t stick to your hand, then pour 500ml of purified water.

  • 18g coffee grounds packed into the portafilter require 15kg of tamping force.
  • Treadmill pace set to 5:30 per kilometer, use a decibel meter to measure belt noise.
  • Indoor hygrometer showing above 50%, Monstera aerial roots sprouting 2cm new shoots.

Watching aerial root sprouting takes half a month, pan-searing meat takes one minute to determine doneness. Staring at a screen padding word counts, readers following along will only end up with burnt outside, raw inside. A 3.8cm thick steak goes in a hot pan, 45 seconds per side.

The probe inserted shows 54°C. Webpages with 54-degree numbers get ranked higher by search engines. Writers without thermometers only say “sear until golden brown.” Golden color has hundreds of variations under different lighting. Cooking depends on probes, mouse feel requires weighing scales. Outsource writers churning out 50 unboxing articles daily haven’t touched the products, so they copy e-commerce positive reviews. The entire article says “crisp buttons” but that’s actually 65g of trigger force.

Finger travel is 0.3mm. Writing 0.3mm helps readers understand their fingers will ache after clicking 10,000 times.

Hands get tired, cycling outdoors means braving the cold. Electric vehicle reviews are packed with flowery language about long range and companionship on long journeys. Cyclists look at the speedometer reading 42.5km. On a snowy day at minus 2°C, battery drains 30% faster. A 70kg person cycling a 15-degree uphill, the motor hums loudly and speed drops to 12km/h. People who haven’t ridden in winter can’t write about the humming sound, they only copy lab data.

Too Many Articles with Identical Perspectives

Search engine hard drives hold 20 billion webpages. Searching “roast whole chicken” brings up 3,000 results. The first 20 pages all say “clean, rub with salt, put in oven.” Chop the 2,000 words, change phrasing, rearrange paragraphs. The machine checks against the database and finds the “rub with salt” action has already been indexed 100,000 times. Someone who’s burned 50 chickens tests and finds using 200°C hot air mode, the skin forms small bubbles at the 12-minute mark. Debone the whole chicken and cut into 4cm-wide pieces.

Add 1.5g sea salt to neutralize gamey flavor, squeeze 5ml lemon juice before serving. Recipes with gram measurements and minutes detach from guesswork cooking. That 1.5g sea salt and 5ml juice constitute new information no one has written before. A meat probe inside the oven shows internal temperature reaching 74°C. When you cut the chicken breast, clear juice而不是粉红色的血水 flows out. Let it rest on a cutting board at room temperature 22°C for 8 minutes after removing from oven.

Juices reabsorb into the meat fibers within 8 minutes. Cutting too early drains all the juices onto the cutting board, making the meat taste like chewing wood. Writing “rest 8 minutes” saves the reader’s two pounds of tender meat.

Travel forums receive 10,000 sunrise-at-Grand-Canyon travelogues daily. Full of exclamations about natural scenery paired with filtered landscape photos. At 4:30 AM on the cliff, temperature is only 4°C. Wind speed of 6m/s can snap ordinary tent fiberglass poles. People wearing single layers shiver from cold, too distracted to watch the sunrise. Content for others requires details others haven’t experienced.

  • Rent windproof sleeping bag, pay $50 cash deposit.
  • South-side scenic cable car opens at 5:30 AM.
  • Wind is calmer behind the big rock on the left side of the viewing platform.
  • Fill thermal cup with 600ml hot water.
  • Keep two high-energy chocolate bars in jacket pocket.

Only an R-value 4.2 insulation pad can block the cold from rock surfaces. Sitting on rocks waiting a full 45 minutes before the sun crests the horizon. Finish writing scenery descriptions, now let’s look at tech device teardowns. Teardown of a newly released tablet shows full screen of “unscrew four screws, remove back cover.” A veteran who’s disassembled 1,000 machines uses a 0.1mm-thick plastic pick, forcefully inserting it into the gap beside the volume buttons.

The frame is glued with industrial adhesive. Heat the platform to 85°C, bake a full 5 minutes. Too much force and you cut the fingerprint flex cable, costing $120 for a replacement. Veterans write down every dangerous step.

  • Avoid the top-left 5G antenna.
  • Disconnect battery flex using anti-static insulated tweezers.
  • Pull out the two white unmarked adhesive strips at the bottom.
  • Stretch tape to 30cm before it won’t break.
  • Wrong position pierces the LCD display assembly.

Piercing the screen costs $1,500 in repairs. Keyboard warriors who make up stories have never paid out of pocket to compensate customers. A repair technician with screwdriver in hand places three screws side by side on white paper and takes a macro photo.

Screw Position Screw Length Wrong Install Consequence
Top-left 1.2mm Cannot secure antenna
Center of motherboard 1.5mm Presses battery causing bulge
Bottom-right 1.8mm Punctures LCD screen

The photo clearly shows the three sizes: 1.2mm, 1.5mm, and 1.8mm. Others following the dimensioned diagram won’t damage equipment worth thousands. Calibrated images fill gaps in teardown procedures.

Crawler programs extract numbers from images. The machine differentiates articles with diagrams from the first 20,000 pages that only say “unscrew motherboard screws.” Auto repair articles follow the same approach.

Searching “wiper blade not cleaning” brings up pages teaching people to buy new blades or wipe with glass cleaner. A pair of OEM wiper blades costs $180 in parts. The mechanic takes out 2,000-grit wet sandpaper. Soak the sandpaper in a water basin for 2 minutes, then sand the edge of the rubber blade 3-5 times. The aged hardened surface gets worn away, revealing glossy new rubber underneath. Spend $2 on sandpaper and 5 minutes, save the cost of replacement parts.

The wiper arm contains a pressure-providing metal spring. After 5 years of use, the old car’s spring tension decreases by about 15%. It no longer conforms to the windshield’s curvature, leaving a 3cm-wide water streak. Use pliers to bend the spring hook inward by 2mm. Restoring downward pressure makes the wiper hug the glass and wipe clean. Telling others specific money-saving tricks beats buying new parts.

Fashion webpages perpetually push thousand-dollar outdoor windbreakers. The product manual prints waterproof index 10,000 and breathability index 8,000. Someone wearing it climbs a 3,000-meter snow mountain.

  • Carry 12kg backpack, hike 5km.
  • Back sweat condenses into large water droplets.
  • Moisture-wicking base layer soaked, clinging to back.
  • Jacket armpits have two fewer breathability zippers.
  • 15cm shorter opening can’t vent internal heat.

The purchased clothing reveals flaws in mountain winds. Upload a photo of the soaked inner lining online, noting windproofing passes but the perspiration zipper is 15cm short. Providing 15cm measurement data gives future buyers a selection criterion. The two chest pockets can’t fit a 6.7-inch phone. When zipping up, the collar presses against chin, leaving red friction marks. Only someone who’s worn the clothes and walked far notices the red marks on chin.

Lacking E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trust)

Lacking Experience

Articles reviewing digital cameras often only copy data sheets from manufacturer websites. 33 megapixels, processor model, 10-bit color depth—dry numbers all. Someone who’s actually filmed with this camera would complain in the article that recording 27 minutes of 4K 60fps video makes the back of the camera scorching hot.

Completely fabricated text can’t retain visitors; readers often close and exit pages within 12 seconds. Backend analytics record an 88% bounce rate; page search ranking drops to the bottom. Authors with first-hand experience include original photos with shooting parameters, hiding real information like aperture f/2.8, shutter 1/250s.

  • System screenshot after pressing shutter 3,450 times
  • 2mm-long dent and scratch on bottom corner of body
  • Original noise photos without beauty mode or filters
  • Layer of dust accumulated inside microphone jack

High-gloss 4000×6000 photos from image libraries can’t fool search systems. People who’ve never touched the product writing recipes most easily reveal themselves; machine-generated steps always read “preheat oven to 200°C, let dough rise 45 minutes.”

Someone who’s actually kneaded 200g of flour knows very well that dough fermented at 26°C room temperature versus 18°C room temperature are completely different. The subtle sour smell when poking dough that fingers detect cannot be scanned by plagiarism software. Forgetting to add that 3g of salt, even if just 2 minutes late, can result in bread height differing by 1.5cm.

At the 14-minute mark, bread crust begins turning attractive caramel color; only when an internal thermometer reads 96°C is it done.

  • How many grams of unmixed dry flour stuck to bowl bottom
  • Seeing jagged edges when tearing open dough
  • How long steam escapes from oven door gap
  • Air holes inside roughly 3mm wide after cutting

People who’ve never visited write travel guides full of online-open hours “9 AM to 5 PM” and “Adult tickets €25.” Someone who’s actually stood in line for 43 minutes under the blazing sun at the south gate of the Colosseum in Rome writes completely different impressions.

A bottle of cold water at the third small kiosk nearby costs €4.50, two to three times more than on the street. People who haven’t surveyed in person can’t draw detours avoiding crowds. At 2:15 PM when the sun slants west, the best shot of pillar shadows is at coordinates 41.8902° N, 12.4922° E.

Dragging a 24-inch suitcase exiting Metro Line B, you need an extra 11 minutes finding the working elevator at the corner. People who haven’t practiced writing Python code will never show error records on their webpages; content is mostly copy-pasted work from others.

At lap 150, an “Error 403” code pops up on screen. The programmer got stuck for 3 hours before solving it with one line: time.sleep(1.5). After switching the computer system to macOS 14.2, the old program package immediately throws red text warnings about missing files.

  • 20-line error screenshot filled with English
  • Daily 10,000 API quota exceeded reminder
  • CPU at 94% with fans going full speed monitoring chart
  • 45-minute process of waiting to redownload install package

Armchair experts sharing car oil change tips often only write “unscrew drain plug, drain old oil, add new oil.” A seasoned mechanic who’s crawled under cars knows that the 14mm drain plug is most easily stripped by the previous repair shop. When removing the old filter, approximately 150ml of blackish waste oil drips onto the frame.

Spraying an entire $4.99 bottle of cleaner is needed to wash away that oil sludge. Bringing back a 5-liter jug of 0W-20 motor oil from the store costs $28.50. If no gloves stained with black oil marks appear in article photos, search crawlers scanning image pixels know this experience article is entirely fabricated.

Lacking Expertise

An account that usually makes cat funny videos posts an 8,000-word tutorial teaching people to treat Type 2 diabetes. The content teaches people to drink 30ml of apple cider vinegar every morning on an empty stomach to lower blood sugar. An endocrinologist seeing such a harsh remedy shakes their head.

When a patient’s HbA1c exceeds 8.5%, drinking sour water alone can’t lower it and will damage the stomach. Webpages without medical literature links are flagged as spam by machine review.

The 1.5cm-wide esophageal ulcer captured by gastroscopy was entirely burned holes from highly concentrated fruit acid.

Reliable medical pages at the bottom must include links to the National Library of Medicine with PMID numbers. PMID: 31405612 paper clearly states that daily carbohydrate intake must be reduced below 50g to produce ketones.

A tech unboxing blogger ventures into teaching people how to fill out American 1040 tax returns, cobbling together six money-saving tips. They tell people to claim 100% of home broadband expenses on Schedule C. People without CPA licenses fundamentally don’t know the IRS audit threshold.

A home office occupying only 15% of total house area means broadband expenses can only be deducted at 15% ratio. Claiming even $200 more in false deductions will result in receiving a CP2000 audit notice in April. The letterhead bears a $75 late payment penalty amount.

  • Medical expenses on Schedule A can only be deducted above 7.5% of adjusted gross income
  • Blind persons get $1,950 extra standard deduction in 2024 tax year
  • Withdrawing 401(k) before age incurs additional 10% penalty

A makeup tutorial girl writes a guide to demolishing interior walls of North American wood-frame houses. The whole article teaches people to buy a $50 electric saw from a hardware store and cut into dry plasterboard walls. Someone with a building engineer’s license would check 1998 Building Department archived original blueprints before动手。

Inside 2×4 spruce studs marked with blue lines on blueprints, a charged 14 AWG thick copper wire is often hidden. Cutting it with one saw stroke instantly causes 120-volt live electricity to trip the whole house’s circuit breaker.

Calling a licensed carpenter to repair that cut load-bearing beam costs $1,200, driving in six half-inch steel expansion bolts.

Unlicensed people can’t distinguish main beams from partition walls. A roof spanning over 12 feet has 4,500 pounds of dead weight pressing on the wall below. Remove the wrong wood, and three months later the second-floor bathtub crashes through the first-floor living room along with the hardwood floor.

A food blogger teaching cooking writes a 3,000-word guide on H-1B work visa application steps. The article guarantees a green card with bachelor’s degree and $70,000 annual salary employment contract. An immigration attorney sees their desk covered with rejection letters.

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