Google searches are facing criticism for not meeting previous standards despite the company’s claims of excellence. A recent study by researchers from various universities revealed that Google’s search results, particularly for products, often lead to questionable quality websites, indicating possible use of affiliate marketing tactics.
Research indicates that the quality of Google’s search results is declining.

A team of researchers from the University of Leipzig, the Bauhaus-University of Weimar, and the Center for Scalable Data Analysis and Artificial Intelligence conducted the study, which was published by 404 Media last Tuesday.
Affiliate marketing involves using unique links in product reviews to generate income from purchases made through these links. This system functions like a commission paid by the product link provider. However, a major issue arises from the competition to rank highly in search results.
The study conducted over a one-year period examined 7,392 product surveys and discovered that highly ranked pages typically feature numerous optimizations and affiliate links, along with lower-quality content. Despite efforts by Google and its competitors to combat SEO manipulation, search engines are still unable to effectively prevent such pages from achieving favorable rankings in search results.
Struggling with Google is difficult, but it’s even harder without it.
Google has outperformed its main competitors, including Bing and DuckDuckGo, despite receiving only two reviews. The company attributes its success to constantly fine-tuning its algorithms to enhance the quality of search results.
Lily Ray, an SEO specialist, thinks that Google is encountering significant challenges. Numerous websites depend on user-generated content, allowing spammers to take advantage. Meanwhile, the growing importance of SEO practices for online businesses has led to site cannibalization that hinders the creation of high-quality content.
Google remains the top search engine, but doubts have been raised about the effectiveness of search results and the measures taken to combat low-quality or spam-filled websites.
Source information provided through Via.
