R Link Explorer New May 2026

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.

library(httr) library(jsonlite) url <- "https://api.moz.com/v2/link/explorer" 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) If you have been avoiding the update because

query <- list( target = "moz.com", scope = "page_to_page", sort = "domain_authority" ) library(httr) library(jsonlite) url &lt;- "https://api

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.