Official statement
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John Mueller has officially categorized backlinks from image sharing sites, free classifieds, and low-cost platforms as spam — conveying zero SEO value. For practitioners, this means a ruthless sorting of their existing link profile and an immediate abandonment of any link-building strategies based on these sources. The boundary between 'acceptable link' and 'declared spam' has shifted, and some tools you thought were neutral are now officially toxic.
What you need to understand
What drives Google to classify these links as spam?
For years, Google has observed an industrial exploitation of free platforms (web hosts, image sharing sites like Flickr, ImageShack, classifieds directories) to generate artificial backlinks. These sites often accept mass-generated content with little to no moderation.
The pattern is always the same: automated profile creation, uploading mediocre or duplicated content, adding links in descriptions or biographies. Google considers that these links do not arise from any authentic editorial recommendation — they exist solely to manipulate PageRank.
Why is this announcement coming now?
Because the link spam detection algorithm (integrated into Google's core for years) has matured enough to systematically address these sources. Mueller’s announcements never happen by chance — they usually accompany a ongoing algorithmic tightening.
In practical terms? Sites that continue to feed their profile with these links risk a gradual devaluation of their domain authority, or even a manual action if the volume is massive. Google no longer directly penalizes these practices — it simply ignores the links, which amounts to the same impact.
What exactly defines a 'low-quality platform'?
Google remains intentionally vague here. We're typically talking about sites with an unfavorable content/spam ratio, nonexistent moderation, or business models based on free hosting against aggressive advertising. Classic examples: free web hosts (000webhost, FreeHosting), slide/document sharing sites without curation, abandoned forums turned link farms.
The underlying criterion: does the link exist because a human editor deemed your content relevant, or because the platform accepts anything without control? If it's the latter, you are in the danger zone.
- Image/document sharing sites without moderation → links systematically ignored
- General classifieds directories (outside established niches like LeBonCoin) → zero value
- Free platforms with public profiles (hosts, SaaS freemium tools exploited for spam) → high risk
- Abandoned or over-spammed forums/communities → likely devaluation of the entire domain
- Any environment where you can create a link in 2 minutes without human validation → suspect by default
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, but with a notable time lag. Tests conducted on witness sites show that Google has been ignoring these links for at least 18 months — officially declaring them as spam is a retrospective formalization. What really changes is the signal sent to the webspam teams: zero tolerance becomes public doctrine.
On the practical side, many junior SEOs continue to buy '500 backlinks' packages that include these sources — because sellers have not adapted. Mueller's declaration aims to definitively kill this market... in theory. In reality, expect to see these offers persist for another 6-12 months before the message truly sinks in.
What nuances should be added to Google's position?
Not all image sharing sites are equal. A link from a verified Behance profile of a recognized designer, with original content and a real audience, is entirely different from an automated upload on ImageShack. Google should make this distinction — but its statement is intentionally broad. [To be verified] if the current algorithm really differentiates these cases or applies a blunt filter by domain.
The same goes for classifieds: a link from a specialized vertical site (e.g., niche real estate directory with editorialization) is not the same as a link from a Craigslist ad scraper. The problem? Google provides no operational criteria to differentiate the two — so in case of doubt, it's safer to consider the entire segment as toxic.
Under what circumstances does this rule not fully apply?
If you operate in a super-specific niche where sharing platforms are part of the ecosystem (e.g., photographers on 500px, designers on Dribbble, developers on GitHub), links from these environments retain some value — provided the profile is active, authentic, and the content is original.
Google cannot afford to ignore all GitHub links or all DeviantArt profiles — that would mean de-indexing a significant part of the creative web. The real red line: intent. A link placed to manipulate rankings will be ignored. A link resulting from legitimate activity on the platform will pass, even if the platform itself is technically 'free and lightly moderated.'
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done with your existing link profile?
Conduct a thorough audit of your backlinks via Search Console, Ahrefs, or Majestic. Identify all links from free domains, public hosts, general image sharing sites, and classifieds directories. Sort them by volume: if you have fewer than 20, Google has probably already ignored them — no urgency. Beyond 50-100, you need to take action.
Concrete action? Targeted disavowal via Google Disavow Tool. Do not disavow out of panic — focus on clearly spammy domains (outrageous outgoing/incoming link ratios, nonexistent content, obvious link farms). Legitimate but 'borderline' platforms (e.g., SlideShare) can remain if your links there are organic.
What mistakes should be avoided in future link-building strategies?
Immediately stop any automated link building service promising hundreds of quick backlinks — these services rely exactly on the sources that Mueller condemns. Even if the price is low and the temptation strong, you are wasting budget for a null result, or even counterproductive.
Avoid also the ‘diversification at all costs’ reflex. Better to have 10 editorial links from relevant niche sites than 200 ghost links on free platforms. Quantity has not compensated for quality in years — this statement nails it down definitively.
How can I check if my current strategy is compliant?
Ask yourself this question for each link source: 'Has a human journalist or editor validated this link, or is it there because the platform accepts everything?' If the answer leans towards the latter option, you are out of the game. Test also the editorial reciprocity: would the site linking to you agree to publish a quality guest article on the same subject? If not, the link lacks any editorial logic.
Use domain scoring tools (Domain Rating Ahrefs, Trust Flow Majestic) but do not rely solely on the metrics — a site with DR 40 can be a content farm. Manually check a sample of source pages: is there original content, a real audience, signs of authority (press mentions, natural incoming links)?
- Audit your backlinks and identify all links from free platforms, image sites, classifieds directories
- Disavow clearly spammy domains (more than 100 outgoing links per page, nonexistent content, no moderation)
- Stop any automated link building service or '500 backlinks' packages immediately
- Refocus your strategy on authentic editorial links (qualified guest posts, digital PR, niche partnerships)
- Monthly check your link profile for any suspicious appearances (negative SEO possible)
- Document your legitimate link sources to justify your profile in case of manual action
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google pénalise-t-il automatiquement un site qui a des liens sur ces plateformes ?
Dois-je supprimer mes anciens profils sur des sites de partage d'images ?
Les liens depuis GitHub, Behance ou Dribbble sont-ils concernés par cette déclaration ?
Comment savoir si un annuaire de petites annonces est considéré comme spam ?
Faut-il désavouer tous les liens issus de ces plateformes d'un coup ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 03/04/2020
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