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Google’s Crackdown on Spammy and Low-Quality Content

google crackdown on spammy content
Graig Upton 15/09/2025

Google has rolled out major updates to tackle spam and low-quality content in Search, aiming to surface more genuinely useful information while filtering out pages built purely to game rankings.

Every day, billions of people use Google to find answers, and the search engine constantly tweaks its systems to fight spam and manipulation. The latest updates go even further, focusing on improving ranking quality, tightening spam policies, and reducing the visibility of unoriginal content.

Key changes in Google’s updates

1. Improved quality ranking

Google’s core ranking systems are being enhanced to reward original, helpful content and demote pages that are thin, repetitive, or clearly built with search engines (not people) in mind.

2. Stronger spam policies

Google has updated its spam rules to cover new manipulative tactics, such as:

  • Expired domain abuse: Buying expired sites and repurposing them to host low-quality content.
  • Obituary spam: Exploiting sensitive searches with junk content.
  • Site reputation abuse: Publishing third-party content on trusted domains (like payday loan reviews on an unrelated educational site) just to benefit from domain authority. This policy was enforced from 5 May 2024.
  • Scaled content abuse: Pumping out mass content (whether automated, human-written, or hybrid) with little or no real value.

3. Reducing low-quality results

Since 2022, Google has been fine-tuning its systems to cut down on unoriginal results. The March 2024 core update refined these systems further, improving how Google identifies whether content is unhelpful, poorly designed for users, or simply created to match niche queries.

The results are already visible. By April 2024, Google reported that unoriginal content in search results had dropped by 45%, better than the 40% reduction they initially predicted.

What this means for website owners

For businesses and site owners, these changes highlight what Google has been saying for years: focus on quality and relevance.

  • Content written only to rank, without actually helping users, is at risk.
  • Hosting low-value third-party content could now count against your site.
  • Buying expired domains to boost search rankings with thin content is a dead-end.
  • Mass content production, whether AI-driven or not, will be closely scrutinised.

Final word

Google’s goal is clear, less clutter, more useful results. For genuine businesses producing helpful content, these changes should be good news, as traffic is more likely to flow to high-quality sites.

If your site relies on shortcuts or “grey-hat” SEO tactics, now is the time to rethink your approach. Long term, the safest and most effective strategy is simple: create content that people actually want to read, not content designed to trick an algorithm.

Graig Upton

Graig has over 20+ years of experience in SEO consultancy and is efficient at identifying solutions with on-page and off-page SEO strategies.