A growing regulatory backlash against search ranking practices has forced Alphabet’s Google to reevaluate portions of its spam enforcement framework in response to criticism by digital publishers in Europe.
Reuters has reviewed a document from the European Commission that proposes modifications in Google’s site reputation abuse policy as a method of identifying and suppressing manipulative ranking tactics common to “parasite SEO,” where third-party content is published on domains with high authority in order to gain search engine credibility.
Reuters has reviewed a document from the European Commission that proposes modifications in Google’s site reputation abuse policy as a method of identifying and suppressing manipulative ranking tactics common to “parasite SEO,” where third-party content is published on domains with high authority in order to gain search engine credibility.
In response to regulatory concerns that opaque policy implementation can disproportionately affect publishers and online visibility across competitive digital markets, Google may be facing a technical shift in how to balance large-scale search quality enforcement with growing antitrust concerns.
Regulatory scrutiny intensified in November when European regulators formally examined whether Google’s enforcement model under its site reputation abuse policy created unfair competitive disadvantages for its publishers.
Reuters reported that the investigation was prompted by complaints from media and digital publishing organizations concerning the company’s handling of third-party hosted content aimed at exploiting existing domain ranking authority, a technique known as parasite SEO within the search optimization industry.
Reuters reported that the investigation was prompted by complaints from media and digital publishing organizations concerning the company’s handling of third-party hosted content aimed at exploiting existing domain ranking authority, a technique known as parasite SEO within the search optimization industry.
It has been reported that Google has submitted a revised set of policy adjustments to address regulatory concerns relating to transparency, ranking treatment, and enforcement consistency as part of the ongoing review conducted under the European Commission’s Digital Markets Act enforcement framework. Prior to the Commission proceeding to the next stage of evaluation, stakeholders and affected parties have been invited to review the proposed modifications and provide feedback.
A Google spokesperson confirmed that active discussions with European authorities are ongoing. This indicates that Google is committed to maintaining regulatory engagement in an effort to reduce the risk of potential antitrust penalties arising from its practices in search governance.
Google’s latest proposal is described as a compliance measure aligned with obligations under the Digital Markets Act, with regulators providing interested parties with until next week to respond formally to the suggestions.
Google’s latest proposal is described as a compliance measure aligned with obligations under the Digital Markets Act, with regulators providing interested parties with until next week to respond formally to the suggestions.
According to the EU watchdog’s preliminary analysis, Google’s spam enforcement mechanisms were reducing the visibility of news publishers and other media platforms in Google Search when these websites contained material sourced from commercial content partnerships as a result of its spam enforcement mechanisms.
It is argued by regulators that the policy affects a widely adopted monetisation structure that publishers rely on in order to generate revenue from digital advertising and syndication, in addition to spam mitigation.
It is argued by regulators that the policy affects a widely adopted monetisation structure that publishers rely on in order to generate revenue from digital advertising and syndication, in addition to spam mitigation.
According to these findings, algorithmic quality control systems are being evaluated as part of dominant search infrastructures, and whether these systems unintentionally distort the competitive landscape of online publishing.
A confirmed violation of the DMA may result in penalties up to 10 percent of the company’s annual global turnover being imposed on the company, creating a significant regulatory and financial stake.
A confirmed violation of the DMA may result in penalties up to 10 percent of the company’s annual global turnover being imposed on the company, creating a significant regulatory and financial stake.
While Google had not responded to Reuters’ request for additional clarification at the time of the release of the report, the European Commission declined to comment publicly on the matter.
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