Google makes structural changes in Search
With the aim to deliver more long-term and impactful changes to Search, Google has announced key updates to its algorithms and introduced additional features to address the challenges with locating relevant from the most reliable sources available. Google has made structural changes in Search that include improvements in Search ranking, easier ways for people to provide direct feedback, and greater transparency around how Search works.
Google’s algorithms help identify reliable sources from the hundreds of billions of pages in the search index. To help prevent the spread of offensive or clearly misleading content that has been known to surface in a small subset of queries, Google has improved its evaluation methods and made algorithmic updates that surface more authoritative content.
As part of the process, Google is taking feedback from real people who assess the quality of Google’s search results and give their feedback on our experiments. These ratings don’t determine individual page rankings, but are used to help them gather data on the quality of our results and identify areas for improvement. Last month, Google updated its Search Quality Rater Guidelines to provide more detailed examples of low-quality webpages for raters to appropriately flag, which can include misleading information, unexpected offensive results, hoaxes and unsupported conspiracy theories. These guidelines are expected to help the algorithms in demoting such low-quality content and help make additional improvements over time.
Google uses hundreds of signals to determine which results are shown for a given query—from the freshness of the content, to the number of times user search queries appear on the page. These signals have been adjusted to help surface more authoritative pages and demote low-quality content.
Google has always aimed to speed up the process of finding information, which has led to features like Autocomplete (that predicts searchers you may be typing) and Featured Snippets (that shows a highlight of relevant information.) Although the content that appears in these features is generated algorithmically and is a reflection of what people are searching for and what’s available on the web, they can sometimes lead to results that are unexpected, inaccurate or offensive.
It will be easier to flag such content that appears in both Autocomplete and Featured Snippets. These feedback mechanisms have clearly labelled categories to enable users to directly report such content while using Search.
In order to bring greater transparency, Google recently updated its How Search Works site to provide more information to users and website owners about the technology behind Search. The site includes a description of how Google ranking systems sort through hundreds of billions of pages to return your results, as well as an overview of our user testing process. In addition, Google has published updates to its policy to the Help Centre so anyone can learn more about Autocomplete and Google’s approach to removals.
There are trillions of searches on Google every year. In fact, 15 per cent of searches on Google Search every day are new – which means there’s always a need for constant improvement in the system and algorithms to present users with the best answers to their queries from a wide variety of legitimate sources. While Google’s efforts to refine Search are ever-evolving, they are committed to preserving user trust and to ensure its products continue to be useful for everyone.
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