Official statement
Other statements from this video 32 ▾
- 0:36 How can you uncover hidden SEO problems in a domain using Google Search Console?
- 1:48 Can you really detect the hidden algorithmic penalties of an expired domain?
- 3:50 How should you handle duplicate content when managing multiple distinct entities?
- 4:25 Should you duplicate your content for every local establishment or consolidate it on a single page?
- 6:18 How can massive DMCA removals destroy the ranking of an entire website?
- 6:18 Can mass DMCA takedowns really harm a site's ranking?
- 7:18 Should you favor a subdomain or a subdirectory for hosting your AMP pages?
- 7:22 Where is the best place to host your AMP pages: subdomain, subdirectory, or parameter?
- 8:25 Does the canonical tag really work if the pages are different?
- 8:35 Should you really remove rel=canonical from your paginated pages?
- 10:04 Can scraping really devastate the SEO of a low-authority site?
- 11:23 Does the server's IP address still influence local search rankings?
- 11:45 Does your server's IP address still impact your local SEO?
- 13:39 Are clickable images without an <a> tag really invisible to Google?
- 13:39 Can a link without an <a> tag pass on PageRank?
- 15:11 How does Google really index your AMP pages when there's a noindex?
- 15:13 Does a noindex tag on an HTML page really prevent the indexing of its associated AMP version?
- 18:21 How long does it take to recover after a complete manual action?
- 18:25 How long does it take to recover from a Google manual action?
- 21:59 Should you include keywords in your domain name to rank better?
- 22:43 Should you really index your robots.txt file in Google?
- 24:08 Why does Google Cache display your page differently from the actual rendering?
- 28:19 Does crawl rate really impact rankings on Google?
- 28:19 Is your server holding back Google’s crawl more than you realize?
- 31:00 Are social signals really useless for Google ranking?
- 31:25 Do social profiles really improve Google rankings?
- 32:03 Do multiple social profiles really boost your SEO?
- 33:00 Are link directories truly overlooked by Google?
- 33:25 Are directory links really ignored by Google?
- 36:14 Should you enable HSTS immediately when migrating a domain to HTTPS?
- 42:35 Why do review stars take so long to show up on Google?
- 52:00 Does stock level really influence the ranking of your product listings?
Google recommends using the DMCA procedure to address duplicate content instead of manually seeking deindexing. The disavow tool should only be activated if you suspect Google may not automatically ignore problematic backlinks. This distinction reveals that Google trusts its algorithms to filter out most toxic links but recognizes that some cases require manual intervention.
What you need to understand
What is the difference between DMCA and a standard deindexing request?
The DMCA procedure is a legal mechanism allowing you to report content that violates your copyright. Specifically, when a site scrapes your articles or republishes your content without permission, you can file a DMCA claim with Google, which will deindex the relevant pages if the violation is substantiated.
Unlike a simple removal request, the DMCA carries legal responsibility for the complainant. Google prioritizes these requests because they are part of a strict legal framework with possible penalties for abuse. The process is more complex but infinitely more effective than a complaint via Search Console.
Why is the disavow only a last resort?
Google asserts that its algorithm automatically ignores the majority of low-quality backlinks. The disavow tool exists primarily for two scenarios: aggressive negative SEO campaigns, or manual penalties resulting from past manipulative backlink practices.
Misuse of the disavow can harm your link profile if you disavow backlinks that Google would have ignored anyway, or worse, links that actually add value. Mueller emphasizes the conditionality: “if you think Google might not ignore” — implying that in 90% of cases, Google already manages the issue.
How can you identify if Google is truly ignoring your toxic backlinks?
You can never be 100% certain, and this is precisely where Google's deliberate ambiguity lies. No official tool confirms whether a link is ignored or taken into account. Search Console displays all detected backlinks without qualitative distinction.
Indirect signals include: absence of a manual penalty, stable organic traffic despite a questionable link profile, or a gradual disappearance of spammy backlinks from your report without action on your part. However, these indicators remain interpretive and not definitive.
- DMCA = priority solution for duplicate content with strong legal grounds
- Disavow = last resort only if you suspect Google is not ignoring toxic links
- Google automatically filters most problematic backlinks according to its own criteria
- No reliable indicator to confirm that a link is effectively ignored by the algorithm
- Risk of counterproductive effect if disavow is used too broadly or on valid links
SEO Expert opinion
Does this prioritization of DMCA over disavow reflect real-world observations?
Yes, but with important nuances. DMCA claims work effectively to remove duplicate content from SERPs, with processing times generally between 48 hours and 10 days. I have observed cases where over 200 scraping pages were deindexed in a week due to a well-documented bulk DMCA procedure.
However, the DMCA does not solve the issue of SEO cannibalization before deindexing. During the processing days, duplicate pages continue to dilute your authority. For commercially valuable content, this window can impact conversions. [To be verified] if Google applies some kind of temporary filter upon receiving the DMCA request, nothing is officially documented.
Is the disavow really as optional as Mueller suggests?
Not always. If you inherit a site that has suffered from aggressive negative SEO (thousands of links from low-quality PBNs in 48 hours), or if you take over a project after cleaning up a historical Penguin penalty, the disavow remains relevant. Mueller speaks conditionally because Google does not want to publicly admit that its anti-spam filter sometimes fails.
In my practice, I have noted ranking recoveries post-disavow in about 30% of cases where the link profile showed massive anomalies (inverted follow/nofollow ratio, anchors over-optimized at 80%+, inconsistent geographical origin). The remaining 70% saw no change, confirming that Google was already ignoring those links.
What risks are there if we reverse the recommended logic?
Using the disavow before exploring the DMCA route for duplicate content serves absolutely no purpose. The disavow pertains to incoming backlinks, not content published elsewhere. What exactly would you disavow? Links from the scraping site to your original site? That makes no strategic sense.
Conversely, attempting a DMCA procedure to manage toxic backlinks is legally inappropriate and destined to fail. The DMCA protects copyright on content, not on hyperlinks. Google will reject the request, and you risk being reported for procedural abuse if repeated.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you effectively launch a DMCA procedure for duplicate content?
First, identify the scraping pages using tools like Copyscape or Siteliner. Document each case with timestamped screenshots, proof of original publication (indexing date via Google cache, Wayback Machine), and exact URLs of the infringing content.
Use the official DMCA claim form from Google (accessible via Google legal support). Provide your complete identity, precise description of the protected content, list of infringing URLs, and a sworn statement. The more complete your file, the faster the processing. Avoid submitting bulk requests exceeding 50 URLs per form to limit technical rejections.
When and how to use the disavow without risk?
First, audit your link profile via Search Console, Ahrefs, and Majestic (cross-reference sources). Identify abnormal patterns: sudden spikes in backlinks, domains with exotic TLDs (.tk, .ml), identical anchors repeated over 100 times, sites with no visible organic traffic.
Only disavow if you notice a temporal correlation between the appearance of these links and a drop in organic traffic, or if you received a manual penalty notification mentioning artificial links. Create a .txt file listed line by line (URL or domain), upload it via Google Search Console, and document the date and content for future reference.
How to verify the impact of these actions?
For the DMCA, monitor the indexing of reported pages using site:exacturl.com in Google. Deindexing typically occurs within 7-10 days. Simultaneously, track your rankings on cannibalized keywords to see if the removal of duplicates improves your visibility.
For the disavow, wait a minimum of 4-6 weeks before assessing the impact (the time it takes for Google to recrawl the relevant links and update its graph). Compare organic traffic, rankings on strategic queries, and spam score from third-party tools. If no change is noted after 8 weeks, the links were likely already ignored.
- Document each duplicate content instance with prior proof and timestamped screenshots
- Use Google's official DMCA form with complete identity and sworn statement
- Activate the disavow only when there is a correlation between traffic drop and acquisition of toxic links
- Cross-reference a minimum of 3 sources (Search Console, Ahrefs, Majestic) before disavowing
- Prefer disavowing URL by URL rather than entire domains unless in massive cases
- Monitor post-DMCA indexing with the site: command and daily position tracking
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Puis-je utiliser le disavow préventivement avant toute pénalité pour nettoyer mon profil de liens ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'une réclamation DMCA soit traitée par Google ?
Le disavow supprime-t-il définitivement les backlinks de mon profil Search Console ?
Que faire si un concurrent scrape mon contenu mais le DMCA n'aboutit pas ?
Comment savoir si Google ignore déjà mes backlinks toxiques sans utiliser le disavow ?
🎥 From the same video 32
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h00 · published on 27/07/2018
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