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Official statement

Links from automatically created sites are generally ignored by Google and do not need to be disavowed. If you wish to dissociate from certain links, using the disavow file is safe and poses no risk to your site.
31:26
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 53:00 💬 EN 📅 14/12/2018 ✂ 15 statements
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📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims to automatically ignore links from automatically generated sites, making disavowing largely unnecessary in most cases. However, the disavow tool remains available and risk-free for those who explicitly want to dissociate from certain backlinks. This means the hours spent tracking and disavowing low-quality spam links are likely wasted time, except in cases of past black hat strategies or active manual penalties.

What you need to understand

Does Google really filter out spam links automatically?

Yes, according to Mueller, Google's algorithm now has sufficient filtering mechanisms to identify and ignore links from automatically created sites. These sites include low-quality private blog networks (PBNs), spam directories, automated comments, and link farms.

The engine assigns a zero value in the PageRank calculation to these backlinks — they are simply ignored, not counted negatively. This approach marks a significant change from the years when a bad link could trigger a Penguin penalty. Today, the risk lies more in the absence of benefit than in active sanction.

When does disavowing remain relevant?

The disavow file still serves a purpose in three specific situations. The first case: you inherit a site that has historically engaged in aggressive black hat linking, and you have an active manual penalty in Search Console. The second case: your link profile contains backlinks from a recent massive negative SEO attack.

The third case: you are in a highly competitive industry (gambling, pharmaceuticals, finance) where even a hint of manipulation can trigger a manual review. In these contexts, disavowing acts as a declaration of intent — you signal to Google that these links are not your doing. Outside of these scenarios, the tool is superfluous.

Why does Google maintain this tool if it has become unnecessary?

The retention of the disavow file can be explained by several reasons. First, it reassures a segment of SEOs who need control — a significant psychological effect in an anxious industry. Secondly, it remains functional for the edge cases mentioned earlier, even if they represent a minority of situations.

Finally, Google likely collects valuable indirect signals through these files: which sites are massively disavowed by the SEO community, and which link patterns trigger defensive behavior. This data feeds into the improvement of detection algorithms. Mueller emphasizes that using the disavow is "safe and poses no risk" — a phrase that suggests no risk in using it, but also no guarantee of impact.

  • Automatic spam links are ignored, not negatively penalized
  • Disavowing remains useful in cases of manual penalties, black hat inheritance, or negative SEO attacks
  • The tool is risk-free but probably ineffective in 90% of cases
  • Google uses disavows as a data source to improve its filters
  • Google's limited transparency on detection thresholds makes arbitration difficult for practitioners

SEO Expert opinion

Is this stance consistent with what we observe on the ground?

Yes and no. Observations agree that basic spam links no longer have any visible negative impact for several years. Sites that accumulate thousands of backlinks from poor directories or spam comments generally do not suffer ranking drops for it. Penguin 4.0, launched in 2016, operates in real-time and devalues rather than penalizes.

However — and this is where it gets tricky — some link profiles continue to trigger manual actions. Documented cases primarily involve massive purchases of links with optimized anchors, detectable PBNs, or overly obvious schemes. Mueller does not make a clear distinction between "algorithmically ignored links" and "links triggering a manual review." This gray area remains problematic.

What nuances should we add to this statement?

The first nuance: "automatically created sites" is a vague definition. A basic scraper generating 10,000 pages? Yes, clearly. But what about a semi-automated site with touched-up AI content, a real structure, and some organic backlinks? [To be verified] as Google does not publish clear thresholds.

The second nuance: the absence of penalty does not mean the absence of impact on domain authority perception. A link profile mainly composed of spam can dilute the signal of good links and indirectly affect trust. This is not an active sanction, but a form of noise that masks the useful signal. Finally, Mueller talks about disavow security — but isolated cases of over-disavowal temporarily affecting rankings have been documented, especially when SEOs disavowed legitimate links out of excessive caution.

In which contexts does this rule not fully apply?

The first context: YMYL (Your Money Your Life) sites in health, finance, or law. Google applies stricter standards, and a link profile even slightly suspect can justify a thorough manual review. The tolerance threshold is lower there, even if the basic algorithm remains the same.

The second context: sophisticated negative SEO campaigns. If a competitor sends 50,000 backlinks from pornographic or illegal sites to your domain in a few days, the algorithm may not react immediately — but a human reviewer who encounters it could trigger an action. The third context: domain migrations or acquisitions of sites with a toxic history. The legacy of penalties may persist even if the current algorithm ignores the links in question.

Attention: Mueller's statement does not explicitly cover large-scale purchase links with optimized anchors. These patterns remain detectable and punishable, even if they technically do not come from "automatically created sites." Do not confuse algorithmic tolerance towards passive spam with immunity for active manipulative strategies.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you stop doing concretely?

Stop wasting time on exhaustively auditing every dubious backlink in your Ahrefs or Majestic reports. If your link profile contains 15% basic spam (poor directories, automated comments, widgets), let it go. Google is already ignoring them. This witch-hunt consumes hours that could be better spent on content creation or acquiring real good links.

The second point: stop disavowing preventively as soon as a suspicious link appears. Unless there is an active manual penalty or documented negative SEO attack, disavowing does not add value. Worse, you risk incorrectly disavowing legitimate links that are misclassified in your tools — a link from a non-indexed amateur blog by Ahrefs may have real value. Disavowal should be a response to an identified problem, not a systematic preventive measure.

What actions should you prioritize instead?

Focus your efforts on acquiring quality editorial links. One backlink from a reputable media source in your sector surpasses 1,000 directory links. Invest in digital PR strategies, content marketing, and business partnerships — anything that generates natural mentions. The signal-to-noise ratio of your link profile matters more than eliminating the noise itself.

Another priority: monitor your Search Console for manual penalties. If you receive a notification saying "Artificial links to your site," then disavowing becomes relevant. But this is an exceptional situation. For 95% of sites, the "Manual Actions" section remains empty all year. Finally, document your link-building strategy — in case of future audits or sales, proving that your links were acquired legitimately is worth more than any disavow file.

How can you adapt your backlink monitoring?

Shift from exhaustive monitoring to targeted monitoring. Set alerts only for abnormal spikes (e.g., +500 backlinks in 24 hours from suspicious domains). These patterns may signal a negative SEO attack worthy of investigation. Ignore normal fluctuations of a few dozen spam links per month.

On the client reporting side, educate your stakeholders about this reality. Many decision-makers still panic when seeing "toxic links" in SEMrush reports. Explain that these proprietary metrics (Toxic Score, Trust Flow, etc.) do not directly reflect Google's algorithm. A link marked "toxic" by a third-party tool is likely already ignored by Google — no action needed.

If you manage high-stake sites or sensitive niches, these decisions become complex. Defensive link-building strategies, analysis of competitor link profiles, or crisis management following negative attacks require specialized expertise. In such contexts, surrounding yourself with a specialized SEO agency capable of differentiating real threats from background noise could be wise — particularly to avoid costly overreactions or dangerous blind spots.

  • Stop exhaustively auditing dubious backlinks — focus analysis on high-value links
  • Disavow only in the presence of a manual penalty or documented negative SEO attack
  • Invest in acquiring quality editorial links rather than cleaning up spam
  • Set targeted alerts for abnormal backlink spikes, ignoring normal fluctuations
  • Educate clients/stakeholders about the difference between third-party tool metrics and algorithmic reality
  • Document all link-building strategies for future traceability and compliance
Mueller's statement radically simplifies backlink management: most spam is ignored automatically, and disavowal becomes a niche tool for exceptional situations. Redirect your resources towards proactively acquiring quality links rather than defensive cleaning. Monitor manual penalties via Search Console, but stop treating every dubious link as a threat. Modern SEO prioritizes strong signals over eliminating weak noise.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je supprimer mon fichier de désaveu existant si je n'ai pas de pénalité manuelle ?
Non, ce n'est pas nécessaire. Si vous avez déjà un fichier de désaveu en place et qu'il n'a pas créé de problème, le laisser actif ne présente aucun risque. Google précise que l'outil est "sécurisé et sans danger". En revanche, inutile d'y ajouter continuellement de nouveaux liens spam — concentrez votre temps ailleurs.
Comment savoir si un backlink est ignoré par Google ou s'il contribue négativement ?
Impossible de le savoir avec certitude sans accès aux algorithmes internes de Google. Les outils tiers (Ahrefs, Majestic) proposent des scores propriétaires, mais ils ne reflètent pas la réalité du traitement Google. En l'absence de pénalité manuelle notifiée dans la Search Console, partez du principe que les liens spam basiques sont ignorés, pas comptabilisés négativement.
Qu'est-ce qu'une attaque SEO négative et comment la détecter ?
Une attaque SEO négative consiste à envoyer massivement des backlinks toxiques vers un site concurrent pour nuire à son référencement. Elle se détecte par des pics anormaux de nouveaux backlinks (plusieurs centaines ou milliers en quelques jours) depuis des domaines suspects. Configurez des alertes dans vos outils de monitoring pour identifier ces patterns rapidement.
Les liens des réseaux de blogs privés (PBN) sont-ils concernés par cette déclaration ?
Partiellement. Mueller mentionne spécifiquement les "sites automatiquement créés", ce qui couvre les PBN de faible qualité générés en masse. Mais les PBN sophistiqués avec du contenu manuel et des métriques crédibles peuvent encore passer sous le radar. Ils restent néanmoins contraires aux guidelines et détectables lors d'examens manuels.
Faut-il encore monitorer son profil de backlinks régulièrement ?
Oui, mais avec un focus différent. Surveillez les pics anormaux qui pourraient signaler une attaque, et analysez les nouveaux backlinks de qualité pour comprendre ce qui fonctionne dans votre stratégie de contenu. Ignorez les fluctuations quotidiennes de spam — elles n'ont pas d'impact et ne méritent pas votre attention.
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