Share a Saved Article and the Link Preview Comes Out Clean
Summary (TL;DR)
Save an article in Readplace and share the link. The preview shows Readplace's clean reader copy: the title with a Reader View label, a short excerpt, and the thumbnail Readplace already downloaded. The link points back to Readplace, so whoever taps it lands in the quiet reader instead of a page full of pop-ups. Search engines still credit the original publisher, so readers see the right source.
You read something good. You want to send it to a friend, a group chat, or your team, so you copy the link and paste it.
On most read-it-later tools you hit a snag. Paste the original link and your friend lands on the same wall you did: the cookie banner, the paywall nag, the video that starts on its own. Paste a saved-page link instead and the preview often comes out blank or broken.
Readplace fixes that one link.
Readplace shares the clean version
Every saved article in Readplace gets a share link.
Tap the share button and you get a link to the clean reader view, and you can send it anywhere a link goes. Your friend sees the article's title with a Reader View label, a short excerpt, and the thumbnail Readplace saved when it first fetched the page. The card looks finished rather than empty, and the label tells them what sits behind the link before they even tap.
Whoever taps the link reads the clean version too, because Readplace strips the ads and pop-ups, shows the words, and puts the short summary it wrote for you at the top.
The preview points back to Readplace
A link preview carries a hidden address that tells chat apps and social sites which page the card stands for.
Readplace sets that address to its own reader page, so the card belongs to a page you control. Tap it and your friend opens the clean reader instead of the cluttered original. The thumbnail and the reader content travel with the link, and they stay attached to the copy Readplace already trimmed and stored.
The original publisher still gets the credit
There is a second hidden tag, and this one tells search engines where the article really lives.
Readplace points it at the original site and keeps these reader pages out of search results. So the publisher keeps the credit. Search engines and answer engines treat the original site as the source, and Readplace hosts a clean copy for you to read without claiming to be the writer.
One tag keeps your share looking good in a chat. The other keeps the source honest in search.
Why a clean share link earns its keep
Good reading spreads when one person hands it to another.
A friend sends you a link, you read it, you save it, and then you pass it on, and a clean share link carries Readplace along for the ride.
The person who clicks sees what the app does in a single tap: a fast, quiet page they can actually read, with a summary up top. That is the clearest pitch we have, and it rides along in an ordinary link.
There is a smaller benefit on your side too. You send the copy you already trust, so you skip the worry about whether your friend will hit a paywall or a wall of ads after they click.
The link you share matches the page you read, down to the thumbnail.
Save an article, tap share, and paste the link into a chat with yourself first. Look at how the preview renders. Then send the next good read to someone who will thank you for the clean version. Start at readplace.com or install the browser extension.