Google Updates Its Site Reputation Abuse Policy, Upending Publisher Affiliate Businesses

Publishers using third-party vendors to power their product recommendations will see their search visibility plummet

Google issued a critical update to its Site Reputation Abuse policy on Tuesday, the culmination of a monthslong effort from the search platform to close a loophole that publishers had been using for years to generate passive affiliate revenue.

In the controversial SEO practice that Google is looking to end, publishers would allow third-party vendors to publish content—typically product recommendations with affiliate links—on their websites. 

Because of the publishers’ strong search authority, these affiliate pages would get a boost in visibility and generate passive revenue, which the two companies would split.

For instance, a vendor called Forbes Marketplace (in which Forbes is a minority investor) creates financial content for CNN Underscored, the affiliate arm of CNN.

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