To me the problem with
#smolweb is that there's isn't a browser that applies these rules.
#Dillo comes close, even though it needs a makeover.
Dillo also has an rdrview plugin, but you have to manually write rdrview: in front of the url in the url bar of every page to see the results.
A better solution would be a content filter, like a
#smolweb plugin that filters the entire html page rejecting anything that doesn't pass the
smolweb validator, or passing it to rdrview. Degrees of acceptance could be set in settings.
A dedicated browser wouldn't require searching for
#smolweb /
#smallweb /
#indieweb blogs, sites, or articles. (There seems to be no such thing as a
#smolweb search engine, although points for
#wiby,
#marginalia,
#kagi and
#mojeek).
Just point the browser to any web site and if it borks, display the "errors" or ignore it with a
418 I'm a teapot error: after all it's the web site author's responsibility to provide clean, readable web sites.
Imagine a world where this plugin would be as ubiquitous as ublock-origin, it could even change web site development.