Official statement
Other statements from this video 52 ▾
- 0:33 Is it really enough to just have an alt attribute for your graphics and infographics?
- 1:04 Should you use alt text for infographics instead of converting them to HTML?
- 2:17 Is it really necessary to duplicate the text of infographics for Google to index them?
- 2:37 Do you really need to duplicate your infographics' content in text for Google?
- 3:41 Why can a site that steals your content rank better than you?
- 4:13 Why isn't optimizing a single SEO factor ever enough to outpace a competitor?
- 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait before reacting to ranking fluctuations?
- 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait for ranking fluctuations to stabilize before taking action?
- 8:58 Do outgoing links to authoritative sites really boost your Google ranking?
- 8:58 Can deep linking to a mobile app really boost your website's SEO?
- 10:32 Site Restructuring: Why does Google recommend redirects over reverse proxy?
- 10:32 Is it true that Google advises against using reverse proxies for migrating from a subdomain to a subfolder?
- 12:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to mask Google's hacking warnings?
- 13:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to hide Google's hacking warnings?
- 13:50 Is it true that the highest number in Search Console is usually the right one?
- 14:44 Should you really put empty user profile pages on no-index?
- 14:44 Should you really set noindex for low-content user profile pages?
- 16:57 Do multiple redirect chains really hinder Google's crawling?
- 17:02 Are Multiple Redirect Chains Really Hurting Your SEO?
- 19:57 Do domain migrations and mergers really cause SEO penalties?
- 19:58 Could separating each step of a site migration save you weeks of SEO diagnostics?
- 23:04 Do pop-under ads really hurt your SEO rankings?
- 23:04 Do pop-under ads really penalize your organic SEO?
- 24:41 Should you overlook historical Mobile Usability errors in Search Console?
- 24:41 Should you ignore mobile errors in Search Console if the live test comes back clean?
- 25:50 Is it true that using nofollow on internal menu links can control PageRank?
- 25:50 Should you really nofollow your menu links to optimize crawling?
- 26:46 Do Google Ads scripts really slow down your site in the eyes of PageSpeed Insights?
- 27:06 Does Google Ads really penalize the speed of your pages in PageSpeed Insights?
- 29:28 Should you really aim for a perfect 100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
- 29:28 Should you really aim for 100/100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
- 35:45 Do image metadata really influence rankings in Google Images?
- 35:45 Can image metadata really enhance your SEO performance?
- 36:29 How many internal links per page should you have to optimize your structure without hindering crawl efficiency?
- 37:19 What is the optimal number of internal links per page for SEO?
- 37:54 Does a completely flat site structure really hurt SEO?
- 39:52 Should you still use disavow or has Google truly automated the ignoring of spam links?
- 41:04 Does the FAQ schema work if the answers are hidden in an accordion?
- 41:04 Is it possible to mark a main page with FAQ schema, or is a dedicated page necessary?
- 41:59 Is it really necessary to have a dedicated page for each video to rank on Google?
- 41:59 Should you create a separate page for each video instead of grouping them together?
- 43:42 How does Google choose which sitelinks to display under your search results?
- 44:13 Does Google really control sitelinks through site structure?
- 45:19 Has PageRank really become a negligible ranking factor for Google?
- 45:19 Is PageRank still a top-ranking factor that you should keep an eye on?
- 46:46 Should you always use the Video Object schema for YouTube embeds subject to GDPR?
- 46:53 Do YouTube two-click embeds really hurt video SEO?
- 50:12 Are mobile interstitials truly all penalized by Google?
- 50:43 Is it really possible to show different interstitials based on traffic source without SEO risk?
- 52:08 Is it true that Google ignores GDPR interstitials without penalizing your SEO?
- 53:08 Can we truly measure the SEO impact of intrusive interstitials?
- 53:18 Do intrusive interstitials really have a measurable impact on your SEO?
Google claims to automatically ignore the majority of spammy incoming links, making the disavow tool unnecessary in most cases. For an SEO practitioner, this means that investing time to clean up a link profile becomes optional, except in cases of proven manual penalties. The key takeaway is to monitor spikes in suspicious toxic links rather than micro-managing every questionable backlink.
What you need to understand
Does Google really filter out all spammy links automatically?
Since the Penguin 4.0 algorithm, Google claims to have integrated a real-time filtering system for low-quality links. The idea is that rather than penalizing a site for toxic backlinks, the engine algorithmically neutralizes them by removing any weight from the PageRank calculation.
In practice, when a link comes from an obviously spammy site network — low-quality profiles, irrelevant themes, over-optimized anchors — Google claims to detect and purely ignore it. No negative penalty, just a score of zero for that link. Hence, the target site suffers no collateral damage.
Is the disavow tool still useful?
Mueller emphasizes: in most cases, there’s no need to touch the disavow. If you haven’t received a manual notification of “artificial links” in Search Console, the tool remains optional. The risk of mistakenly disavowing valid links exists — and it’s irreversible without resubmitting a file.
The notable exception remains manual penalties. If you have a manual action related to links, Google expects a proactive cleanup effort. In that case, the disavow becomes mandatory to prove your good faith when requesting a review. But outside this context, Google clearly states: “don’t stress over it.”
Why is Google now communicating on this topic?
This statement fits within a strategy for simplifying SEO for non-technical individuals. Google wants to discourage paranoid SEOs who spend hours auditing thousands of backlinks without any real impact. It’s also a tacit admission: their algorithm is mature enough to handle link spam without human intervention.
Still, this transparency also serves to absolve Google of responsibility. If a competitor launches a massive negative SEO attack against you and your traffic plummets, Google can always say: “we warned you, we filter everything.” The nuance lies here: does it really filter everything, in all cases?
- Penguin 4.0 is supposed to filter spammy links in real-time without penalizing the target site
- The disavow tool is recommended only in cases of proven manual penalties
- Google encourages SEOs to stop micro-managing toxic backlinks to save time
- This statement aims to simplify SEO for non-experts, but raises questions about edge cases
- The risk of negative SEO remains underestimated in this official communication
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement aligned with real-world observations?
On sites with a clean link profile, Mueller's statement holds true: occasional spikes in spam do not cause any visible damage. Audit tools may scream alarm, but rankings remain stable. Google seems to genuinely ignore links from parked sites, spammy comments, or shabby directories.
The issue arises on sites already algorithmically weakened. If your domain has a history of over-optimization, weak authority, or a vague thematic profile, the accumulation of toxic links may correlate with drops in visibility. [To be verified]: Google denies any causal links, but documented cases exist. Coincidence or algorithm limitation? Difficult to prove.
What nuances should be added to this official discourse?
First point: Mueller says they are “probably already ignored.” This ambiguity leaves a margin of uncertainty. If Google were 100% sure, they would say “we ignore them,” plain and simple. This “probably” covers cases where the algorithm fails to detect a link — and that happens, especially with sophisticated PBN networks or recent negative SEO techniques.
Second nuance: Google talks about links being “low quality”, not “obviously malicious.” A random spam link from a Russian site is one thing; a coordinated attack of 10,000 porn links with toxic anchors is another. Mueller's statement does not explicitly cover this second case — and that’s where the disavow may still be relevant, as a precaution.
In which cases does this rule not apply?
If you have received a manual action for “artificial links,” disavowing becomes mandatory. Google expects documented proof of cleanup — emails to webmasters, dated disavow file — before accepting a review request. Ignoring this step guarantees a rejection.
Moreover, sites in ultra-competitive niches (finance, health, casino, CBD) may occasionally face coordinated negative SEO attacks. If you notice a sudden spike of thousands of toxic backlinks correlated with a drop in organic traffic, failing to act based on the principle of “Google filters everything” is akin to sticking your head in the sand. A preventive disavow takes two hours of work — the risk of doing nothing may cost 30% of revenue.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do with detected spammy links?
If you have no manual penalty and your traffic is stable, the official recommendation is clear: don’t touch anything. Instead, invest your time in acquiring positive links — editorial backlinks, thematic partnerships, press mentions. The ratio of healthy links to toxic links will naturally improve.
On the other hand, if you observe a temporal correlation between a spike in spam and a drop in rankings, document everything: date of the spike, screenshots from Search Console, exports of backlinks. Prepare a targeted disavow file for the most obvious domains (porn sites, offshore casinos, identified spam networks). But never disavow hundreds of domains in bulk without checking them individually.
What mistakes should you avoid when managing toxic backlinks?
The first classic mistake: blindly relying on the toxicity score from SEO tools. These proprietary algorithms overdetect risk to justify their added value. A “Toxic Score” of 80/100 means little if the link comes from an amateur blog that is legitimate in your niche. Always contextualize.
The second trap: disavowing entire domains instead of specific URLs. If a mainstream site published a negative article about you and you want to neutralize that link, disavow the URL only — not the root domain. Otherwise, you may lose other valid backlinks from the same site. The syntax in the disavow file matters: domain:example.com vs https://example.com/page.
How to monitor your link profile without spending hours?
Set up a weekly alert in Search Console for new referring domains. If the volume remains stable (a few dozen per week), a quick glance will suffice. If you suddenly see +500 domains in a week, this signals the need for a thorough audit.
Use tools like Monitor Backlinks or Linkody that automatically notify you of abnormal spikes. Set custom alert thresholds based on your usual profile. The idea is to detect anomalies without micromanaging every new link. Google says it handles it, but checking remains a basic SEO hygiene.
- Check the “Links to Your Site” section in the Search Console monthly
- Only disavow if you have a manual penalty or proven correlation between traffic drop and spam spike
- Manually audit each domain before adding it to the disavow file — never trust automated scores
- Prefer disavowing by specific URL rather than entire domain, except for blatant spam
- Document each action (exports, dates, screenshots) in case of future review requests
- Focus 80% of your effort on acquiring positive backlinks rather than cleanup
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je désavouer les liens provenant de sites pornographiques ou de casinos ?
Comment savoir si Google a vraiment ignoré un lien toxique ?
Un concurrent peut-il me nuire avec une attaque de negative SEO ?
Faut-il contacter les webmasters pour demander la suppression de liens spammy ?
À quelle fréquence auditer mon profil de backlinks ?
🎥 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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