• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

It’s Not Just You, Google Really Has Gotten Worse

January 18, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A year-long study has found what people have been complaining about on hard-to-find Reddit posts for a while now: Google is getting worse.

People have complained online that Google’s search results have taken a dive in quality over the last year or so. The new study called it “a troubling sign that a noticeable number of social media users are sharing their observation that search engines are becoming less and less capable of finding genuine and useful content satisfying their information needs.”

Advertisement

“Reportedly, a torrent of low-quality content, especially for product search, keeps drowning any kind of useful information in search results.”

A particularly spammy area, focused on by researchers at several German universities, is product review queries. The team monitored 7,392 such queries over the course of a year on search engines Google, Bing, and DuckDuckGo.  The problem mainly seems to stem from search engine optimization (SEO), i.e. content created and tailored towards ranking on search engines, rather than focusing on useful quality information. 

This can take the form of pages crammed full of keywords, or else holding back key information until far down an article in order to increase read time (think of articles about how to change your phone settings that insist on telling you about what a phone is at the top). In product reviews, affiliate marketing – where marketers or influencers are paid for getting people to click on or buy a product – is also playing a role.

“Our findings suggest that all search engines have significant problems with highly optimized (affiliate) content—more than is representative for the entire web,” the team explained, adding that “only a small portion of product reviews on the web uses affiliate marketing, but the majority of all search results do.”

Advertisement

Unfortunately, it’s a problem that could get worse as people utilize chatbots to churn out more and more content, trying to stay ahead of search engines’ ability to downrank such content by tweaking their algorithms.

“We further observe an inverse relationship between affiliate marketing use and content complexity, and that all search engines fall victim to large-scale affiliate link spam campaigns,” the team wrote. “However, we also notice that the line between benign content and spam in the form of content and link farms becomes increasingly blurry—a situation that will surely worsen in the wake of generative AI.”

There are a number of explanations for the decline in search engine usefulness, including what is termed “enshittification“, where companies “abuse their users to make things better for their business customers” before “finally, they abuse those business customers to claw back all the value for themselves.”

Marissa Mayer, the 20th employee to join Google, who went on to serve as CEO of Yahoo, believes that the problem is down to the Internet itself becoming worse.

Advertisement

“I do think the quality of the Internet has taken a hit,” Mayer told Freakonomics. “When I started at Google, there were about 30 million web pages, so crawling them all and indexing them all was relatively straightforward. It sounds like a lot, but it’s small. Today, I think there was one point where Google had seen more than a trillion URLs.”

Mayer added that it was natural for people to blame Google when they aren’t getting the quality search results they used to, but she sees Google’s results as more of a window into the web itself.

“The real question is, why is the web getting worse?”

The study has been made available online by the Webis Group.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Israel strikes Gaza in retaliation for rocket fire, military says
  2. Pa. AG sues to block subpoena in 2020 election probe
  3. Google beefs up wildfire tracking, tree cover, and Plus Codes in Maps
  4. Do Single People Have Better Sex Lives?

Source Link: It's Not Just You, Google Really Has Gotten Worse

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Have We Finally “Seen” Dark Matter? Galactic Gamma-Ray Halo May Be First Direct Evidence Of Universe’s Invisible “Glue”
  • What Happens When You Try To Freeze Oil? Because It Generally Doesn’t Form An Ice
  • Cyclical Time And Multiple Dimensions Seen in Native American Rock Art Spanning 4,000 Years Of History
  • Could T. Rex Swim?
  • Why Is My Eye Twitching Like That?!
  • First-Ever Evidence Of Lightning On Mars – Captured In Whirling Dust Devils And Storms
  • Fossil Foot Shows Lucy Shared Space With Another Hominin Who Might Be Our True Ancestor
  • People Are Leaving Their Duvets Outside In The Cold This Winter, But Does It Actually Do Anything?
  • Crows Can Hold A Grudge Way Longer Than You Can
  • Scientists Say The Human Brain Has 5 “Ages”. Which One Are You In?
  • Human Evolution Isn’t Fast Enough To Keep Up With Pace Of The Modern World
  • How Eratos­thenes Measured The Earth’s Circumference With A Stick In 240 BCE, At An Astonishing 38,624 Kilometers
  • Is The Perfect Pebble The Key To A Prosperous Penguin Partnership?
  • Krampusnacht: What’s Up With The Terrifying Christmas-Time Pagan Parades In Europe?
  • Why Does The President Pardon A Turkey For Thanksgiving?
  • In 1954, Soviet Scientist Vladimir Demikhov Performed “The Most Controversial Experimental Operation Of The 20th Century”
  • Watch Platinum Crystals Forming In Liquid Metal Thanks To “Really Special” New Technique
  • Why Do Cuttlefish Have Wavy Pupils?
  • How Many Teeth Did T. Rex Have?
  • What Is The Rarest Color In Nature? It’s Not Blue
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version