Official statement
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Google considers rewriting news articles without added value as low-quality content. John Mueller recommends combining multiple sources to produce original content. For news sites and aggregators, this is a clear signal: simple reformulation no longer justifies a position in the SERPs.
What you need to understand
Why is Google targeting article reformulation?
John Mueller's statement directly addresses sites that mechanically reformulate news wires from AFP, Reuters, or Associated Press without providing context, analysis, or additional sources. This type of content floods the SERPs on news queries, creating a degraded user experience: ten different sites tell the same story with different words.
Google aims to prioritize sources that intelligently aggregate information rather than those that duplicate it. The nuance is crucial: it is not about banning the coverage of common news but sanctioning the total lack of editorial added value.
What does Google mean by "added value"?
Mueller speaks of combining multiple sources, but the notion of added value goes further. This includes: a distinct editorial angle, industry expertise, exclusive data, expert interviews, historical perspective, or practical implications analysis.
A concrete example: if AFP announces an algorithm update, merely rewriting the wire by changing a few words is not enough. Adding an analysis of observed impacts on your clients, screenshots from Search Console, or a technical breakdown of changes provides real added value.
Does this directive apply only to news sites?
No. The principle applies to all sites that rely on third-party content: deal aggregators, comparison sites, affiliate sites that reformulate product sheets, blogs that rewrite industry studies without commenting on them.
The logic is transversal: if your content could be automatically generated from public sources without qualified human intervention, it is at risk. Google makes no fundamental distinction between reformulating a Bloomberg article and rewriting a manufacturer's technical sheet.
- Simply rewording existing articles is considered low-quality content
- Google recommends cross-referencing multiple sources to create original content
- Added value can take many forms: editorial angle, expertise, exclusive data, analysis
- This directive concerns all types of sites that rely on third-party content, not just media
- The key criterion: could your content be automatically generated without qualified human intervention?
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Partially. For hot news queries, it is indeed observed that Google favors primary sources (media that published first, official sources) and a few quality analyses. Pure reformulations rarely occupy top positions.
But the reality is more nuanced: many aggregation sites continue to rank well by intelligently reformulating with a simple title change and a slightly different intro. The boundary between "acceptable reformulation" and "low-quality content" remains blurred. [To be verified] on significant volumes: does Google really apply automatic penalties or is it simply one signal among others?
What nuances need to be added to this directive?
Mueller speaks of combining multiple sources, but how many exactly? Are two enough? Three? Five? This imprecision is problematic. In practice, an article that cites two sources with a unique 150-word analysis often performs better than a standalone reformulation, but we lack clear quantitative data.
Another point: the notion of "added value" is subjective. Does a local site that reformulates a national wire by adding a relevant geographic angle provide value? Probably yes for local users, but does Google consistently detect it?
[To be verified]: the signals used by Google to detect pure reformulation (semantic similarity, publication timestamp, citation patterns) are not publicly documented. Hence, we work by inference.
In what cases does this rule not really apply?
For low-volume long-tail queries, reformulations continue to rank well simply because few sites cover the subject. Editorial competition is the determining factor: if no one produces original content on a niche news item, reformulating a single source may suffice.
Another exception: sites with very high domain authority can afford light reformulations that Google tolerates better. An established generalist site publishing a reformulated wire often ranks better than a more qualitative but less authoritative specialized site. This is debatable, but it is the observed reality on many queries.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete steps should be taken to remain compliant?
If you cover news or reformulate third-party content, consistently apply a minimum three-source rule: identify at least three different articles or primary sources, extract complementary angles, and build a synthesis that offers something that no single source provides.
Always add an original analysis section: "What it changes for...", "Implications for...", "Our reading of the numbers". Even 100-150 words of expert commentary often suffice to differentiate your content. Explicitly cite your sources with links: this enhances credibility and helps Google identify that you have done a synthesis.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?
Never simply pass an article through a semantic spinner, whether manual or automated. Google is getting better at detecting mechanical synonyms and sentence restructurings without substance. If you are using AI to reformulate, ensure you add a substantial human editorial layer.
Avoid publishing in the first five minutes after an AFP/Reuters release if you have nothing original to say. It's better to wait an hour, read three to four different covers, and publish richer content slightly later. The race for reformulated scoops no longer makes sense in the current algorithm.
How to audit your existing content?
Identify in Search Console pages with a low CTR despite decent impressions: these are often contents that Google ranks but considers less relevant. Cross-check with a semantic similarity tool (Copyscape, Siteliner) to detect articles too close to single sources.
For each suspicious article, ask yourself this simple question: if the original source disappeared from the web, would my article still provide something useful to the user? If the answer is no, it is a candidate for rewriting or consolidation with other content.
- Apply a minimum three-source rule for all content based on third-party information
- Always add an original analysis section of at least 100-150 words
- Explicitly cite sources with links to original content
- Never publish a pure reformulation in the first minutes after a news item
- Regularly audit content with low CTR despite decent impressions
- Use similarity detection tools to identify at-risk content
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de sources faut-il croiser exactement pour qu'un contenu soit considéré comme original par Google ?
Puis-je reformuler une dépêche AFP si j'ajoute un angle local ou sectoriel spécifique ?
Les sites à forte autorité sont-ils exemptés de cette directive sur les reformulations ?
Est-ce que citer mes sources avec des liens suffit à prouver que j'ai fait un travail de synthèse ?
Faut-il supprimer tous mes articles qui reformulent des contenus existants ?
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