| Google Is Finally Trying to Kill AI Clickbait    On Tuesday, Google announced changes to combat AI spam in  search. An SEO expert says these new rules could “change everything.” 
 Google is taking action against algorithmically generated spam. The search  engine giant just announced  upcoming  changes, including a revamped spam policy, designed in part to keep AI  clickbait out of its search results.
 
 “It sounds like it’s going to be one of the biggest updates in  the history of Google,” says Lily Ray, senior director of SEO at the marketing  agency Amsive. “It could change everything.”
 
 In a blog post, Google  claims the change will reduce “low-quality, unoriginal  content” in search results by 40 percent. It will focus on reducing what the  company calls “scaled content abuse,” which is when bad actors flood the  internet with massive amounts of articles and blog posts designed to game  search engines.
 
 “A good example of it, which has been around for a little  while, is the abuse around obituary spam,” says Google’s vice president of  search, Pandu Nayak.  Obituary spam  is an especially grim type of digital piracy, where people attempt to make  money by scraping and republishing death notices, sometimes on social platforms  like  YouTube.  Recently, obituary spammers have started  using  artificial intelligence tools to increase their output, making the issue  even worse. Google’s new policy, if enacted effectively, should make it harder  for this type of spam to crop up in online searches.
 
 This notably more aggressive approach to combating search  spam takes specific aim at “domain squatting,” a practice in which scavengers  purchase websites with name recognition to profit off their reputations, often  replacing original journalism with AI-generated articles designed to manipulate  search engine rankings. This type of behavior predates the AI boom, but with  the rise of text-generation tools like ChatGPT, it’s  become  increasingly easy to churn out endless articles to game Google rankings.
 
 The spike in domain squatting is just one of the issues that  have  tarnished  Google Search’s reputation in recent years. “People can spin up these sites  really easily,” says SEO expert Gareth Boyd, who runs the digital marketing firm  Forte Analytica. “It’s been a big issue.” (Boyd admits that he has even created  similar sites in the past, though he says he doesn’t do it anymore.)
 
 In February, WIRED reported on several  AI  clickbait networks that used domain squatting as a strategy, including one  that took the websites for the defunct indie women’s website  The  Hairpin and the shuttered Hong Kong-based pro-democracy tabloid  Apple  Daily and filled them with AI-generated nonsense. Another  transformed  the website of a small-town Iowa newspaper into a bizarro repository for AI  blog posts on retail stocks. According to Google’s new policy, this type of  behavior is now explicitly categorized by the company as spam.
 
 In addition to domain squatting, Google’s new policy will also  focus on eliminating “reputation abuse,” where otherwise trustworthy websites  allow third-party sources to publish janky sponsored content or other digital  junk. (Google’s blog post describes “payday loan reviews on a trusted  educational website” as an example.) While the other parts of the spam policy  will start enforcement immediately, Google is giving 60 days notice prior to  cracking down on reputational abuse, to give websites time to fall in line.
 
 Nayak says the company has been working on this specific  update since the end of last year. More broadly, the company has been working  on ways to fix low-quality content in search, including AI-generated spam,  since 2022. “We’ve been aware of the problem,” Nayak says. “It takes time to  develop these changes effectively.”
 
 Some SEO experts are cautiously optimistic that these changes  could restore Google’s search efficacy. “It’s going to reinstate the way things  used to be, hopefully,” says Ray. “But we have to see what happens.”
 
 wired.com
 |