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Official statement

Google uses many ranking factors. A competing site that copies content can still rank better if other signals (speed, UX, backlinks, overall structure) are better. You need to improve the site as a whole, not just the textual content.
3:41
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 55:53 💬 EN 📅 24/07/2020 ✂ 53 statements
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Other statements from this video 52
  1. 0:33 Is it really enough to just have an alt attribute for your graphics and infographics?
  2. 1:04 Should you use alt text for infographics instead of converting them to HTML?
  3. 2:17 Is it really necessary to duplicate the text of infographics for Google to index them?
  4. 2:37 Do you really need to duplicate your infographics' content in text for Google?
  5. 4:13 Why isn't optimizing a single SEO factor ever enough to outpace a competitor?
  6. 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait before reacting to ranking fluctuations?
  7. 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait for ranking fluctuations to stabilize before taking action?
  8. 8:58 Do outgoing links to authoritative sites really boost your Google ranking?
  9. 8:58 Can deep linking to a mobile app really boost your website's SEO?
  10. 10:32 Site Restructuring: Why does Google recommend redirects over reverse proxy?
  11. 10:32 Is it true that Google advises against using reverse proxies for migrating from a subdomain to a subfolder?
  12. 12:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to mask Google's hacking warnings?
  13. 13:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to hide Google's hacking warnings?
  14. 13:50 Is it true that the highest number in Search Console is usually the right one?
  15. 14:44 Should you really put empty user profile pages on no-index?
  16. 14:44 Should you really set noindex for low-content user profile pages?
  17. 16:57 Do multiple redirect chains really hinder Google's crawling?
  18. 17:02 Are Multiple Redirect Chains Really Hurting Your SEO?
  19. 19:57 Do domain migrations and mergers really cause SEO penalties?
  20. 19:58 Could separating each step of a site migration save you weeks of SEO diagnostics?
  21. 23:04 Do pop-under ads really hurt your SEO rankings?
  22. 23:04 Do pop-under ads really penalize your organic SEO?
  23. 24:41 Should you overlook historical Mobile Usability errors in Search Console?
  24. 24:41 Should you ignore mobile errors in Search Console if the live test comes back clean?
  25. 25:50 Is it true that using nofollow on internal menu links can control PageRank?
  26. 25:50 Should you really nofollow your menu links to optimize crawling?
  27. 26:46 Do Google Ads scripts really slow down your site in the eyes of PageSpeed Insights?
  28. 27:06 Does Google Ads really penalize the speed of your pages in PageSpeed Insights?
  29. 29:28 Should you really aim for a perfect 100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
  30. 29:28 Should you really aim for 100/100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
  31. 35:45 Do image metadata really influence rankings in Google Images?
  32. 35:45 Can image metadata really enhance your SEO performance?
  33. 36:29 How many internal links per page should you have to optimize your structure without hindering crawl efficiency?
  34. 37:19 What is the optimal number of internal links per page for SEO?
  35. 37:54 Does a completely flat site structure really hurt SEO?
  36. 39:52 Should you still use disavow or has Google truly automated the ignoring of spam links?
  37. 40:02 Should you still disavow spammy links pointing to your site?
  38. 41:04 Does the FAQ schema work if the answers are hidden in an accordion?
  39. 41:04 Is it possible to mark a main page with FAQ schema, or is a dedicated page necessary?
  40. 41:59 Is it really necessary to have a dedicated page for each video to rank on Google?
  41. 41:59 Should you create a separate page for each video instead of grouping them together?
  42. 43:42 How does Google choose which sitelinks to display under your search results?
  43. 44:13 Does Google really control sitelinks through site structure?
  44. 45:19 Has PageRank really become a negligible ranking factor for Google?
  45. 45:19 Is PageRank still a top-ranking factor that you should keep an eye on?
  46. 46:46 Should you always use the Video Object schema for YouTube embeds subject to GDPR?
  47. 46:53 Do YouTube two-click embeds really hurt video SEO?
  48. 50:12 Are mobile interstitials truly all penalized by Google?
  49. 50:43 Is it really possible to show different interstitials based on traffic source without SEO risk?
  50. 52:08 Is it true that Google ignores GDPR interstitials without penalizing your SEO?
  51. 53:08 Can we truly measure the SEO impact of intrusive interstitials?
  52. 53:18 Do intrusive interstitials really have a measurable impact on your SEO?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that a competing site that scrapes your content can still outperform your rankings if its other ranking signals are superior — speed, UX, backlinks, architecture. Originality of content is no longer enough to guarantee a good ranking against a technically stronger competitor. It's essential to work on all ranking factors, not just the writing quality.

What you need to understand

Is original content no longer enough to protect against scraping?

Mueller's statement breaks a stubborn belief: originality of content is not an absolute shield. A site can copy your text verbatim and achieve better positions if its technical profile and popularity surpass yours.

Google does not rank pages solely on the freshness or originality of the text. It aggregates hundreds of signals — loading speed, user experience, domain authority, link quality, engagement signals. A scraper that excels in these areas can take your positions even with recycled content.

What are these 'global signals' that Mueller mentioned?

Mueller remains deliberately vague — classic. However, we can infer the pillars of modern ranking: backlink profile (quantity, quality, diversity), Core Web Vitals (LCP, FID, CLS), site architecture (depth, siloing, crawlability), experience signals (bounce rate, time spent, repeated clicks).

A competitor that scrapes but operates with a strong domain, impeccable technical infrastructure, and aggressive link building can easily compensate for the lack of originality. Google favors the overall user experience over content ownership.

Does this mean that Google ignores duplicate content?

No — but it does not systematically penalize it. Google detects duplicate content, tries to identify the original source through freshness and indexing signals, but then applies its classic ranking algorithm.

If the scraper publishes your text on a stronger domain, with better UX and stronger backlinks, Google may consider its version more relevant for the user — even if you are the legitimate author. Originality is just one factor among many in the final equation.

  • Original content does not guarantee ranking against a technically superior competitor
  • Global signals — speed, UX, backlinks, architecture — can compensate for copied content
  • Google does not automatically penalize duplicate content; it chooses the version that offers the best overall experience
  • Content ownership is just one signal among hundreds in the ranking algorithm

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes — and it’s frustrating for many editorial sites. We regularly observe aggregators or MFA (Made For Ads) sites scraping content and ranking ahead of the original sources. Why? Because they heavily invest in link building, optimize their Core Web Vitals, and structure their sites like SEO machines.

The problem is that Google never communicates the relative weight of each factor. We don't know if a DR 70 domain with copied content consistently beats a DR 40 domain with original content or at what technical threshold originality becomes decisive. [To be verified] — public data is lacking to quantify these balances.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

First, the context of the query matters a lot. For generic informational queries, an authoritative aggregator can crush a small blog. But for niche queries or YMYL (Your Money Your Life), Google favors E-E-A-T — and here, originality, demonstrated expertise, and editorial signatures carry substantial weight.

Next, the speed of detection plays a role. If Google crawls and indexes your content first — via a well-configured XML sitemap, optimized crawl budget, and a backlink profile pointing to your new pages — you have a temporal advantage. The scraper that republishes two hours later may be relegated to duplicate. But if your site is slow to index, you lose that window.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

For queries where Google activates YMYL filters (health, finance, legal), editorial authority and demonstrated expertise take precedence. A scraper without identified authors, solid legal mentions, or a recognized publication history will struggle to rank — even with an impeccable technical profile.

Similarly, sites benefiting from Google News or Discover operate on different ground. Google News favors original sources identified through specific metadata and an editorial history. A pure scraper will never enter this flow, even with a powerful domain.

Note: This statement does not justify neglecting original content. It simply indicates that originality alone is no longer sufficient — a complete package: content + technical + popularity is necessary. Investing solely in writing without addressing infrastructure and link building is a losing strategy against better-equipped competitors.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely if a competitor scrapes your content and outperforms you?

First step: audit technical gaps. Compare your Core Web Vitals to theirs using PageSpeed Insights or CrUX. Look at display speed, server response time, resource weight. If your competitor loads in 1.2 seconds and you in 3.5, you have part of the answer.

Next, analyze their backlink profile using Ahrefs, Majestic, or Semrush. Number of referring domains, DR/DA, anchor quality, geographic and thematic diversity. If their link building overwhelms you, the originality of your content won’t compensate for that gap. You need to bridge it — ethical link building, press relations, guest blogging, linkable content strategy.

What mistakes to avoid when dealing with a better-performing scraper?

Don’t waste your time with DMCA or duplicate content reports to Google — they are rarely effective. Google does not penalize duplicates by default; it chooses the version that provides the best experience. Your report won’t change anything if your site remains technically inferior.

Avoid also focusing solely on producing additional content. Publishing ten articles per week is pointless if your site loads slowly, if your internal linking is shaky, and if you have no backlinks. The obsession with content volume without a solid technical foundation is a dead end.

How to check if my site is competitive on global signals?

Conduct a comprehensive technical audit — crawl with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl, check page depth, 404 errors, redirect chains, canonical tags. Make sure your crawl budget is not wasted on unnecessary pages.

Test your Core Web Vitals in real conditions (not only in the lab) via Search Console or CrUX Dashboard. If you are in the red zone for LCP or CLS, that’s a priority. A slow site with original content loses to a fast site with copied content.

  • Audit Core Web Vitals and compare to competitors
  • Analyze the backlinks profile of the scraper to identify gaps
  • Optimize architecture and internal linking to improve crawling and PageRank distribution
  • Speed up indexing via XML sitemap, IndexNow, and a links profile pointing to new content
  • Don’t focus solely on content production — technical foundation and popularity are crucial
  • Develop E-E-A-T (identified authors, legal mentions, editorial history) for YMYL queries
Let’s be honest: competing with a technically superior scraper requires thorough work on all pillars of modern SEO — performance, link building, architecture, user experience. The originality of the content remains an asset, but it is no longer enough to compensate for structural weaknesses. If your site is penalized by a competitor that steals your content and technically outperforms you, it may be wise to consult a specialized SEO agency to orchestrate a comprehensive optimization strategy — technical audit, UX redesign, targeted link building strategy. These projects require cross-disciplinary skills and a holistic vision that is difficult to master alone internally.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Google pénalise-t-il automatiquement le contenu dupliqué ?
Non. Google détecte le duplicate content mais ne le pénalise pas systématiquement. Il tente d'identifier la source originale et applique ensuite son algorithme de classement global. La version qui offre la meilleure expérience utilisateur peut se classer devant l'original.
Un site avec contenu copié peut-il vraiment battre le site original ?
Oui, si ses autres signaux de classement — vitesse, UX, backlinks, architecture — sont supérieurs. Google agrège des centaines de facteurs ; l'originalité du contenu n'est qu'un signal parmi d'autres, pas un critère absolu.
Comment protéger mon contenu d'un scraper qui performe mieux ?
Impossible de bloquer techniquement un scraper sans nuire à ton SEO (robots.txt bloque aussi Google). La seule défense est d'améliorer ton profil global : vitesse, netlinking, UX, crawl budget. Il faut combler les écarts sur lesquels le scraper te dépasse.
Les signalements DMCA ou les rapports de duplicate content sont-ils efficaces ?
Rarement. Google ne traite pas le duplicate comme une violation à sanctionner, sauf infraction légale claire. Les signalements n'ont d'impact que si le contenu copié viole des droits clairement établis et que tu fournis des preuves juridiques.
Quels signaux globaux pèsent le plus face à un contenu original ?
Google ne communique pas de pondération exacte. Les observations terrain suggèrent que la vitesse (Core Web Vitals), l'autorité du domaine (backlinks) et l'architecture (maillage, profondeur) sont déterminants. Mais le poids varie selon le type de requête et le contexte YMYL.
🏷 Related Topics
Content Links & Backlinks Pagination & Structure Web Performance

🎥 From the same video 52

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 24/07/2020

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