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Official statement

To identify the original content when syndicating, we recommend adding a link that attributes the original source. Priority is given to the original article when copies exist after publication on an authoritative source like Knol.
49:20
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 54:17 💬 EN 📅 06/05/2009 ✂ 11 statements
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Official statement from (17 years ago)
TL;DR

Google recommends adding a link to the original source when syndicating content. The algorithm favors the original article when it detects multiple copies, especially if the primary source has established authority. The question remains whether this simple link truly guarantees correct attribution in all scenarios.

What you need to understand

Why does Google need to detect original content?

The web is filled with duplicate content for a simple reason: syndication is a common and legitimate practice. An article published on site A can be legally reprinted on sites B, C, and D with the author’s consent. The problem? Google must determine which version to display in its results.

If the engine cannot identify the original source, it may favor a copy over the initial article. The creator then loses traffic, authority, and potentially associated revenue. Therefore, Google has every interest in solving this equation to maintain the quality of its index.

What does this recommendation actually mean for practitioners?

Google’s statement is straightforward: add a link to the source when you syndicate content. This signal allows the algorithm to trace the origin and understand the relationship between versions.

In practice, this implies a canonical tag pointing to the original URL, or at a minimum, a visible editorial link in the syndicated article. Google notes that priority goes to the original article when copies exist after publication on an authoritative source. This notion of "authoritative source" remains vague but likely refers to PageRank and domain E-E-A-T signals.

What’s the difference between syndication and plagiarism in Google’s eyes?

Google distinguishes between involuntary duplicate content and manipulative duplicate content. Legal syndication with clear attribution does not trigger any penalty. Crawling identifies relationships between versions through technical and editorial signals.

On the other hand, if you republish content without permission or attribution, or if you attempt to disguise duplication to capture illegitimate traffic, you enter a zone of active manipulation. Here, algorithmic filters may kick in, not to mention manual actions in cases of massive spam.

  • Main signal: attribution link to the original URL in the syndicated content
  • Technical signal: canonical tag pointing to the primary source
  • Source authority: Google prioritizes established domains when detecting
  • Timing: the article published first benefits from an advantage if signals are ambiguous
  • Editorial context: presence of a mention "This article was originally published on..."

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Overall, yes, but with frequent misses. We regularly observe cases where an aggregator or third-party site snatches the ranking despite a correct attribution link to the source. Domain authority and crawl freshness factors clearly play a role that Google minimizes in its communication.

A major news site that picks up your content three hours after your publication can overshadow you in the SERPs even with a perfect attribution link. Why? Because its overall authority and crawl velocity overshadow your original signals. [To be verified]: Google claims to prioritize the original, but engagement metrics and domain reputation seem to weigh more heavily than mere chronological priority.

What nuances should be added to this recommendation?

The recommendation to add an attribution link is correct but insufficient on its own. In reality, you also need to negotiate with your syndication partners to implement a canonical tag or, at the very least, a rel="nofollow" attribute on their internal links pointing to the syndicated version.

Another rarely mentioned point: indexing speed counts immensely. If your original content takes 48 hours to be crawled while the syndicated version is indexed in 2 hours, you start with a significant disadvantage. Utilizing the Indexing API or optimizing your crawl budget becomes as important as the attribution signals themselves.

In which cases does this rule not apply as expected?

When you syndicate on closed or semi-closed platforms like Medium, LinkedIn Pulse, or other editorial social networks. Google treats these environments differently as they have their own ecosystem of signals. An article republished on Medium with a canonical tag can still rank independently if engagement there is strong.

Automated curation sites also pose a problem. Some aggregators scrape content, add a micro-attribution link in the footer, and still rank due to their authority and internal linking. Does Google systematically detect these abuses? No. The filters are probabilistic, not absolute.

Warning: if you massively syndicate your content across dozens of third-party sites without strict control of attribution signals, you risk diluting your own thematic authority and creating unintentional cannibalization in the SERPs.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely during syndication?

First step: publish the original on your domain and wait for Google to index it before any syndication. Use Google Search Console to submit the URL or, preferably, the Indexing API if you have access. This chronological priority in the index constitutes your first signal of authorship.

Next, negotiate with your syndication partners to add a canonical tag to your URL in the of their version. If that's not possible, require at least a visible editorial link in the first paragraphs with wording like "Article originally published on [YourSite]".

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?

Never syndicate simultaneously on multiple platforms without first indexing your original version. You would create fair competition among all versions, and the algorithm would choose based on authority criteria that may not necessarily favor you.

Also, avoid syndicating only an excerpt of your content without a link to the full article. Google may then consider that the complete version is elsewhere and prioritize a third party that may have scraped your entire text. It’s paradoxical but observed in the field.

How can you verify that your original content is correctly identified?

Use a Google search with long excerpts in quotes from your article. Observe which URL appears first. If it’s not yours, it means the attribution signals are not functioning correctly or your indexing is too slow.

Also monitor in Search Console for pages marked as "Duplicate, alternate URL selected by user". This status indicates that Google detected multiple versions and preferred one other than yours. Analyze the missing attribution signals and correct.

  • Publish the original and force its indexing before any syndication
  • Require a canonical tag from all syndication partners
  • Add a visible editorial attribution link in the syndicated content
  • Monitor search results with verbatim excerpts to verify ranking
  • Regularly check Search Console for duplication conflicts
  • Negotiate staggered publication timelines with your syndication partners
Managing syndication requires a technical and editorial rigor that many underestimate. Between negotiating with partners, optimizing crawl, monitoring SERPs, and resolving indexing conflicts, the process can quickly become time-consuming. If your organization regularly publishes high-value content that is frequently syndicated, engaging a specialized SEO agency to structure a solid workflow and automate monitoring may prove wise. This investment avoids silent traffic losses that can represent tens of thousands of visits over a year.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un lien d'attribution sans canonical suffit-il pour protéger mon contenu original ?
Dans la majorité des cas oui, mais la canonical reste le signal technique le plus fiable. Un lien éditorial seul peut être ignoré si l'autorité du site syndiqué dépasse largement la vôtre ou si le crawl de votre version originale est trop lent.
Que se passe-t-il si je syndique sur Medium ou LinkedIn avec une canonical vers mon site ?
Google devrait théoriquement privilégier votre version originale, mais ces plateformes génèrent souvent un engagement fort qui peut influencer le ranking indépendamment. Testez et surveillez les résultats de recherche pour ajuster.
Mon contenu syndiqué peut-il me pénaliser si le partenaire n'ajoute pas les bons signaux ?
Non, Google ne pénalise pas le contenu dupliqué légitime. Par contre, vous risquez de perdre le positionnement au profit de la version syndiquée, ce qui revient au même en termes de trafic perdu.
Combien de temps dois-je attendre entre publication originale et syndication ?
Idéalement 24 à 48 heures pour que Google crawle et indexe votre version. Si vous avez accès à l'API Indexing, vous pouvez réduire ce délai à quelques heures. Vérifiez l'indexation effective dans Search Console avant de syndiquer.
Comment réagir si un site scrape mon contenu sans autorisation et se positionne devant moi ?
Commencez par un DMCA via Search Console si c'est du vol pur. Ensuite, renforcez vos signaux d'autorité thématique et votre maillage interne. Si le site scrappe massivement, un rapport de spam peut déclencher une action manuelle de Google.
🏷 Related Topics
Content Discover & News AI & SEO Links & Backlinks

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 06/05/2009

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