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Official statement

When multiple sites publish the same content, Google tries to choose which one to display by relying on various signals such as Page Rank and internal/external links. Canonical links must be correctly used to indicate the original source.
34:39
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h03 💬 EN 📅 10/12/2018 ✂ 7 statements
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Other statements from this video 6
  1. 3:42 Les timestamps sont-ils vraiment déterminants pour l'indexation de vos contenus ?
  2. 17:24 Peut-on vraiment indexer des URLs bloquées par robots.txt ?
  3. 31:52 Le contenu dupliqué est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
  4. 43:51 Faut-il vraiment dupliquer tout le contenu desktop sur mobile pour l'indexation mobile-first ?
  5. 44:59 Faut-il vraiment isoler vos contenus différents dans des sous-domaines ?
  6. 75:34 Les Core Updates changent-elles la qualité de votre contenu ou juste sa pertinence ?
📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google selects the version to display based on PageRank and internal/external link signals. Canonical tags should point to the original source to avoid any ambiguity. The real challenge? Understanding that the ‘best’ version is not always the oldest, but rather the one Google deems most relevant according to its criteria of popularity and authority.

What you need to understand

Why doesn’t Google simply filter out identical content?

Duplicate content across different sites is not penalized by Google, contrary to common belief. The search engine simply chooses which version to display in the results to avoid overcrowding the SERPs with identical pages.

This selection is based on a calculation of relevance and authority. Google analyzes the PageRank of each page, the quality and quantity of incoming links, as well as the internal linking structure. If a personal blog and a national media outlet publish the same press release, Google will likely favor the national media due to its link profile.

What do ‘link signals’ really mean in this context?

External links pointing to a page are the most determining signal. A syndicated page on an authoritative site with 50 quality backlinks will overshadow the original version of a blog without backlinks.

Internal linking also plays a role, but a secondary one. A page well-integrated into a site's architecture, accessible within 2 clicks from the homepage, will have a slight advantage over an orphaned or deeply buried page. Let's be honest: against a massive PageRank gap, internal linking won't save you.

Are canonical tags enough to ensure attribution?

No. Google sees them as ‘suggestions and not absolute directives’. If your canonical points to your original version but a third party syndicating your content has 10 times more authority, Google may ignore your tag.

The canonical is still essential to clarify your intentions and help Google work more efficiently. Without it, the engine must guess which version to prioritize, increasing the risk of the wrong page being indexed. But it does not replace a solid link profile.

  • Cross-domain duplicate content is not penalized, Google merely chooses one version to display
  • PageRank and backlinks overwhelmingly dominate other signals in this selection
  • Canonical tags are guides, not orders — Google can ignore them
  • The original version does not automatically win: site authority takes precedence over recency
  • Internal linking helps but does not compensate for a massive lack of backlinks

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement truly reflect observed behavior in the field?

Yes, with significant nuances. The overshadowing of the original source by a powerful aggregator occurs daily. E-commerce sites often see their product listings duplicated by Amazon or Cdiscount, even with well-configured canonicals.

What’s missing in this statement? The real weighting of each signal. Mueller speaks of ‘various signals’ without a clear hierarchy. In practice, PageRank and backlinks account for 80-90% of this decision. [To be verified]: Google claims that content freshness matters, but no concrete data supports its weight relative to PageRank.

What situations render this rule ineffective?

First case: geolocalized sites. Identical content published on a .fr and a .be may see both versions coexisting in the results if Google detects a different local intent. The ‘one version’ rule does not strictly apply.

Second case: syndicated content with slight modifications. Changing 15% of the text is sometimes enough to create two distinct pages in the eyes of Google, which will then display both. The line between duplicate and unique content remains blurry — Google provides no precise threshold.

Attention: if you syndicate your content on third-party platforms (Medium, LinkedIn), make sure they include a canonical link to your original version. Otherwise, their authority will systematically overshadow yours in the results.

Doesn’t this approach create a bias in favor of larger sites?

Absolutely. The mechanism structurally favors authoritative sites to the detriment of original creators. A media entity can legally republish (with consent) an article from an independent blog and capture 100% of organic traffic due to its link profile.

Google justifies this by emphasizing user experience: ‘We show the most relevant version.’ But relevance and authority are not synonymous. An original article on a modest site may be more comprehensive and well-documented than its republished version on a large site. The system ignores this qualitative dimension.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do to protect your original version?

Strengthen your link profile on the pages you want to prioritize for indexing. An article without backlinks will systematically be overshadowed by a syndicated version on an authoritative site. Launch a targeted link-building campaign on your key content.

Optimize your internal linking to send PageRank to these pages. Link them from your homepage, category pages, and high-traffic articles. Every internal link counts, even if its impact remains limited against massive external backlinks.

How do you manage content syndication without shooting yourself in the foot?

Contractually require that any site republishing your content includes a canonical tag pointing to your original URL. Manually check that this tag is present after publication — many CMS platforms tend to overlook it.

Publish first on your site and wait 24-48 hours before syndicating. This gives Google time to crawl and index your original version first. Recency does not guarantee anything, but it reduces initial ambiguities during crawling.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in this context?

Never republish your own content on Medium, LinkedIn, or other platforms without substantially modifying the text. These sites have overwhelming PageRank: they will index first and your original version will vanish from the results.

Avoid cross-canonicalization between two of your own sites. If you manage a network of sites, each piece of content should exist on a single domain with a self-referential canonical. Multiplying versions ‘just in case’ dilutes your signals and confuses Google.

  • Implement a self-referential canonical tag on each original page
  • Audit third-party sites republishing your content to verify the presence of canonicals pointing to you
  • Develop a targeted link-building plan for your high-value content
  • Structure your internal linking to push PageRank to priority pages
  • Avoid syndicating on ultra-authoritative platforms without substantial text modification
  • Regularly monitor SERPs for your target keywords to detect any potential overshadowing by a third-party version
Managing cross-domain duplication relies on a battle of authority and signals. Protecting your original version demands ongoing work in link-building, internal linking, and monitoring. These technical optimizations can prove complex to orchestrate without in-depth expertise. Engaging a specialized SEO agency allows you to benefit from a precise diagnosis of your situation and a tailored strategy to maximize your chances of seeing your original content dominate search results.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Google pénalise-t-il le duplicate content entre sites différents ?
Non. Google ne sanctionne pas le contenu dupliqué entre domaines distincts. Il sélectionne simplement quelle version afficher dans les résultats, généralement celle ayant le plus d'autorité et de backlinks.
Ma balise canonical garantit-elle que Google indexera ma version ?
Non. La canonical est un signal que Google peut ignorer si un autre site republiant votre contenu possède un profil de liens nettement supérieur. Elle aide mais ne garantit rien.
Peut-on afficher deux versions d'un même contenu dans les SERP ?
Rarement, sauf si Google détecte des différences d'intention (géolocalisation, cible différente). En règle générale, une seule version apparaît pour éviter de saturer les résultats avec du contenu identique.
Combien de temps faut-il attendre avant de syndiquer un contenu ?
Attendez 24 à 48 heures après publication sur votre site pour laisser à Google le temps de crawler et indexer votre version originale en premier. Cela réduit les risques d'ambiguïté.
Le maillage interne suffit-il à compenser un déficit de backlinks ?
Non. Le maillage interne aide à distribuer le PageRank mais ne peut pas rivaliser avec un écart massif de backlinks externes. Les liens entrants restent le signal dominant dans la sélection de la version à afficher.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content Crawl & Indexing Links & Backlinks Local Search

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