Official statement
Other statements from this video 22 ▾
- 1:37 Should you really stop using the URL inspection tool to index your pages?
- 1:37 Does the overall quality of a site truly influence its crawl frequency?
- 2:22 Should you really stop using the URL Inspection Tool to get your pages indexed?
- 9:02 Does Google really combine hreflang signals from HTML, sitemaps, and HTTP headers?
- 9:02 Can you really target multiple countries with a single hreflang page?
- 10:10 What happens when your hreflang tags contradict each other between HTML and sitemap?
- 11:07 Should you use rel=canonical between multiple sites in the same network to prevent signal dilution?
- 13:12 Are links between sites of the same network really treated as normal links by Google?
- 14:14 Do Google’s manual actions really focus on global patterns, or can they also sanction isolated cases?
- 16:54 Does the length of your anchor text really impact your SEO?
- 18:10 Does Google really re-evaluate pages that improve over time?
- 20:04 Do keyword-rich anchor texts serve as a negative signal for Google?
- 29:42 Does Google really keep your content in its original language instead of translating it?
- 30:44 Does Google translate your queries to display foreign content?
- 32:00 Do old customer reviews harm the ranking of your product listings?
- 33:21 Does the search volume for your brand really boost your SEO?
- 34:34 Are iFrames really crawled by Google, or should you avoid them for SEO?
- 46:28 How can you verify if your cookie banners are blocking Google’s indexing?
- 47:02 Does the cached page truly reflect what Google indexes?
- 51:36 How can you effectively manage multiple versions of technical documentation without jeopardizing your SEO?
- 54:12 Does a revoked manual action truly wipe out all traces of a penalty?
- 54:46 Should you really delete your disavow file or risk a manual action?
Google claims to have systems capable of identifying and automatically neutralizing certain types of links without manual intervention. This means that some backlinks in your profile could be completely ignored in the ranking calculation without you being notified. The real question for SEO practitioners is: which types of links are affected, and how can you ensure that your link-building efforts don't fall into this automatic filter?
What you need to understand
What types of links can Google automatically identify and ignore?
Mueller remains deliberately vague on this question, which is typical of Google's official communications. However, we can infer that links from easily recognizable patterns are the primary targets: mass blog comments, shared CMS footers, widely distributed widgets, or low-quality business directories.
The concept of "easily identifiable" is the crux of this statement. Google is not referring here to manual penalties, but rather to silent algorithmic neutralization. Current systems — probably powered by machine learning — can detect recurring patterns: the same anchor across thousands of domains, the same HTML template, the same injected block of code.
Does this automatic neutralization replace Google's manual actions?
No, it is an additional layer. Manual actions for artificial links still exist and target the most blatant or massive cases. What Mueller describes here is upstream processing, at the level of crawling or indexing, where certain links are simply excluded from the graph without any alert being raised in the Search Console.
For the practitioner, this changes the game: you can have an apparently clean link profile — no manual actions — while having a significant portion of your backlinks ignored. The risk? Investing budget in link-building strategies that yield no measurable effect because Google has already classified them as irrelevant.
Why is Google communicating about this capability now?
This statement fits into a long-term strategy: reassuring webmasters that they don’t need to panic over negative SEO or unintentional toxic links. By stating that systems automatically ignore bad links, Google implies that disavowal is becoming less and less necessary.
But be careful — and this is where expertise counts — this communication can also serve to deter attempts at manipulation. By leaving uncertainty about what is detected or not, Google maintains a scenario that dampens aggressive strategies. This is applied game theory to SEO.
- Algorithmic neutralization: some links are excluded from the calculation without alerts or visible manual action.
- Detectable patterns: widgets, footers, automated comments, repetitive anchors at scale.
- No replacement for manual penalties: both coexist, each targeting a different level of severity.
- Strategic communication: reassuring about negative SEO while deterring active manipulations.
- Voluntary opacity: Google never specifies exactly which signals are detected, maintaining a beneficial gray area for the algorithm.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes and no. On paper, Mueller's assertion aligns with what many SEOs have observed for years: backlinks that appear in Search Console but never seem to influence ranking. Tests conducted by several agencies show that links from content farms or poorly designed PBNs yield no measurable gain, even when indexed.
However — and this is where it gets tricky — some theoretically "easily identifiable" links continue to work in certain contexts. Well-integrated widgets, author signatures on mainstream platforms, or even footer links on thematic sites can still pass juice. [To be verified]: Google's ability to distinguish legitimate editorial context from mechanical placement is still imperfect.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
First point: Mueller talks about "certain types" of links, not all. The algorithm does not neutralize all low-quality links, only those whose pattern is evident enough to be processed at scale without the risk of false positives. More ambiguous links — those that resemble natural editorial while being purchased — probably still go under the radar.
Second nuance: this capability for automatic identification varies by industry and languages. Hyper-competitive English-speaking markets likely benefit from more trained detection models than Francophone niches or languages with lower volume. A link ignored on a US site may not be ignored on a FR site, simply because the training datasets differ.
In what cases might this rule not apply?
Let's be honest: Google does not have infinite capacity for real-time processing. Very low authority or newly created sites may see their backlinks handled with less granularity. The algorithm probably prioritizes high-traffic sites or those in sensitive sectors (finance, health, legal).
There are also cases where Google might intentionally allow manipulated links to better observe behaviors and refine its models. A link ignored today might serve as a training signal tomorrow. Finally, some emerging patterns — new link-building techniques — may not yet be on the algorithmic radars, creating temporary windows of effectiveness until Google integrates them into its filters.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you identify if some of your links are probably ignored?
There is no official Google tool to identify which backlinks are considered or not. However, some indirect signals can alert you. If you obtain links from low authority domains with repetitive patterns (same template, same location, same anchor), and you see no movement in your rankings — even marginal — on long-tail queries, there’s a strong chance those links are being filtered.
Another method is to compare the volume of backlinks reported in Search Console with the actual evolution of your organic traffic and rankings. If your link profile grows regularly but your KPIs stagnate, a portion of those links is probably neutralized. However, be cautious: correlation is not causation; other factors may explain the stagnation.
What link-building strategies to favor to avoid this filter?
The answer boils down to one word: diversity. Absolutely avoid uniform patterns. Vary your anchors, placements (body, sidebar, contextual footer), and types of content (guest posts, editorial mentions, citations without direct links followed by conversion to backlinks). The more your links resemble a natural and chaotic graph, the less they will be detectable by an algorithm.
Prioritize editorial links earned through merit: case studies, original data, infographics, free tools. These links present intrinsic variability — each webmaster integrates them differently — making automatic detection nearly impossible. And that’s precisely what Mueller implies: the "easily identifiable" links are those that follow a template that can be infinitely reproduced.
Is it still worth using Google's disavow tool?
In most cases, no. If Google is already automatically ignoring the most obvious toxic links, manually disavowing those same links is redundant. The disavow tool remains relevant in very specific situations: huge and recent negative SEO attacks, manual action received for artificial links, or migrating a site with a dubious SEO history.
Focus your energy on acquiring quality new links rather than obsessively cleaning your profile. The time spent auditing thousands of low-impact backlinks would be better invested in creating linkable content or digital PR campaigns. And this is where it gets tricky — this recommendation may seem simple, but its implementation requires sharp expertise and dedicated resources.
- Regularly audit your backlinks to spot overly uniform patterns (same anchor, same location, same type of site).
- Prioritize diversity in your link-building strategy: varied anchors, different contexts, multiple sources.
- Do not panic about isolated low-quality links — Google is probably already ignoring them.
- Reserve the use of disavow for cases of manual actions or documented and massive negative SEO.
- Invest in linkable content (studies, data, tools) that generate naturally diverse backlinks.
- Measure the real impact of your link-building campaigns through the evolution of rankings and traffic, not just via the volume of links.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google prévient-il lorsqu'il ignore automatiquement certains liens ?
Quels types de liens sont les plus susceptibles d'être ignorés par Google ?
Un lien ignoré peut-il nuire au référencement de mon site ?
Faut-il désavouer les liens que Google ignore probablement déjà ?
Cette capacité d'ignorer les liens automatiquement existe-t-elle depuis longtemps ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 27/11/2020
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