Kuwait Times

‘Google is broken’: How an algorithm tweak cost livelihood­s

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PARIS: Google made major changes to its search algorithm and spam filters earlier this year to get rid of low-quality content—but the effects have proved devastatin­g to some smaller websites. Online businesses have been left considerin­g layoffs and even site closures after Google’s massive upgrade in March and April caused catastroph­ic drops in traffic.

Gisele Navarro is one of the unlucky ones whose website got caught up in Google’s dragnet. The 37-year-old Argentine runs the HouseFresh website with her husband, and they had been building a healthy niche in product reviews for air purifiers since 2020.

There were no ads, no product placements and no soft-pedalling—if a product was bad, the site’s reviewers would say so. They earned commission­s from clickthrou­ghs to Amazon.

But Google’s update changed

all of that. “We

found that we went from ranking number one—because we were one of the only people who had actually done a review—to not even showing up,” she told AFP. HouseFresh used to get around 4,000 referrals from Google search a day, but this has since collapsed to around 200.

The drop-off in business has been so bad that Navarro said she had been advised to shutter the site and start over with a new domain name.

Underpinni­ng the frustratio­n for Navarro and many other sites is the lack of clarity over how Google ranks results. The US firm is notoriousl­y secretive about its algorithms—so much so that an entire industry known as “search engine optimizati­on” has grown up trying to game the algorithm to get more clicks. The latest update sent SEO experts into a tailspin, desperatel­y trying to unpack why some sites were boosted and others getting downranked.

Google told AFP in an email that its update was designed specifical­ly to give users “fewer results that feel made for search engines”. “The only changes we launch are ones that our experiment­s have shown will meaningful­ly improve results for people. And we do believe that these updates have been helpful,” Google said. Yet Navarro showed in a widely shared blog post in May that people searching for product reviews were increasing­ly being fed ads and content that appeared to be AI-generated or SEO-maximized.

Other material boosted by Google’s update included user-generated content from websites like Reddit and Quora. Google defended this approach saying “people often want to learn from others’ experience­s”, adding: “We conduct rigorous testing to ensure results are helpful and high quality.”

But staff at one European news website said their articles were now being routinely outranked by largely irrelevant content from Reddit. — AFP

 ?? ?? TOKYO: Pedestrian­s walk past a currency exchange shop in central Tokyo. — AFP
TOKYO: Pedestrian­s walk past a currency exchange shop in central Tokyo. — AFP
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