Thousands of Google’s internal search ranking documents recently leaked
Introduction
Thousands of Google’s internal search ranking documents recently leaked, giving us a rare glimpse into the innermost workings of how Google ranks sites. This blog will talk about the entire situation: what the leaked data was all about, how it would help the SEO community, and how Google responded to everything.
What the Leak Was About and Who Leaked It
The leaked documents showed information about the data Google collects to rank sites. Erfan Azimi, a search marketer and the founder of EA Eagle Digital, came across the leak at first. He wanted to let the search community know how the ranking system actually works and on May 5, reached out to Rand Fishkin, co-founder of Moz, since he felt that he was the best person to make this information public.
Rand checked with some of his friends who are ex-Googlers to make sure whether the leak was authentic, and then turned to Mike King, CEO of iPullRank, to decode the documents. He analyzed the documents and later published an article sharing his insights.
When It Was Leaked
The documents were released on Github on March 13 by a bot called yoshi-code-bot. They came from Google’s internal Content API Warehouse, which the employees use to store their files, and were not taken down until May 7.
What the Leaked Data Is About
There were 2,596 modules in the API files with 14,014 attributes, and the data seemed to be about:
How It Is Useful for the SEO Community
Some key takeaways from Mike and Fishkin’s analysis of the documentation are:
Google’s Response
On May 30, Google confirmed that the leaked documents were authentic, but also said that we shouldn’t assume that the data provided a complete picture of the ranking system. Google spokesperson David Thompson said, “We would caution against making inaccurate assumptions about Search based on out-of-context, outdated, or incomplete information”. They also said that their ranking signals are always changing.
Conclusion
SEO experts are still decoding the documents and we will probably gain even more insights in the months to come. And while the data leak cannot exactly be used to get a quick win in SEO, there is still a lot of information in there that can confirm our best practices and bring us more on the right track, such as the importance of authorship and of getting links to a website with a good user experience.
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