Google Now Using HTTPS As A (Very Slight) Ranking Signal In Search To Encourage More Encryption
from the pros-and-cons dept
Back in April, we wrote about claims that Google was considering giving a boost in its search rankings to sites that are encrypted. Today, it officially announced the policy, noting that the company has been testing it for a little while and thinks that it works well. The weighting is very tiny, but the company makes it clear that it will likely increase that over time, and the current low ranking is more of a "grace period" to encourage more sites to encrypt. Google also makes clear that its reason for doing this is to encourage greater encryption to make the entire web more safe and secure:For these reasons, over the past few months we’ve been running tests taking into account whether sites use secure, encrypted connections as a signal in our search ranking algorithms. We’ve seen positive results, so we’re starting to use HTTPS as a ranking signal. For now it's only a very lightweight signal—affecting fewer than 1% of global queries, and carrying less weight than other signals such as high-quality content—while we give webmasters time to switch to HTTPS. But over time, we may decide to strengthen it, because we’d like to encourage all website owners to switch from HTTP to HTTPS to keep everyone safe on the web.When we wrote about it back in April, I found it a bit surprising that Google would do this, given that, historically, it has always said its search rankings were entirely focused on quality. You could, perhaps, make an argument that a site that uses SSL is more likely to be a high quality site, but Google doesn't even appear to be making that argument. As a site that has already strongly moved to SSL, this might (marginally) help our Google rankings (not that we actually get much traffic from Google in the first place), and getting much more of the web encrypted is a good thing in general.
It still seems, though, that for all the good this does, others will now make use of this as an argument for other kinds of "nudging" behavior by Google. For years, the legacy entertainment industry has pushed Google to better rank "good" sites and to downrank "pirate" sites -- which the industry still seems to think is a simple black and white calculation (it's not). Google can point out that SSL v. non-SSL is obvious, but I fully expect those who seem to think Google should be designed in their own interests, as opposed to those of Google's users, to jump on this as proof that Google can solve other problems.
This still is a good move, though. Encouraging more encryption on the web is always the right move. I'm just still a bit surprised that Google would take this step, and wonder how others will react to it.
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Filed Under: encrypt everything, encryption, https, search ranking, ssl
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Fly-by-night copy sites...
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I am at a loss to think of an argument by any industry that couldn't be answered by Google with: "This issue is bigger than you ... or your financial interests. Go talk to Bing."
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Could you though? I've seen a lot of very bad websites created of entirely scraped contents that use SSL. That Google would even consider these as being able to rank even slightly higher in search results due to the use of SSL would be ludicrous.
A bad website is a bad website, whether it uses SSL or not. That being true, then one would hope that Google is smart enough to rank a higher quality site that doesn't use SSL higher than it would rank a bad site that does use SSL.
If their algorithm doesn't do that, then using SSL as even a very minor ranking factor would be a very bad step in my opinion. It needs to be and and/if situation as opposed to "oh, they use SSL so they get a better rank".
I'd assume there is more to it than that, but assumptions often get one in a place they don't want to be.
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Re: Fly-by-night copy sites...
I regularly purchase certs for less than $8/year.
If that's too much there are even free certs
No one has a valid excuse to avoid SSL.
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I think Google wants to use this as a signal in part because it will help them filter out certain sites that are not being maintained or updated. It will certainly create another layer of work for those running parking pages.
If there is a massive increase in sites using SSL after this announcement, Google will have shown themselves to be perhaps a little too powerful in the marketplace. If everyone is rushing to adjust to Google, do they hold what is essentially a overly dominant position over the web? Anti trust, perhaps?
Google very likely sees this as a populist theme they can work, hoping that you will forget that they didn't secure their own internal networks in the past.
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Another PR stunt by the NSA/Google
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Identity platform
How would/could this Secure Layer solve the gaping wound you Americans inflicted ? Is there really anyone who still thinks it is a safe bet to believe in anything what Googles claims ?
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On this part they'd look puzzled at each other and ask:
"What is Bing? Aren't you the Internet?"
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I think Google wants to use this as a signal in part because it will help them filter out certain sites that are not being maintained or updated.
See, he THINKS. But it doesn't change the fact that it's bullshit. Where the heck was this written anyway?
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Sadly,...
To improve your google rankings, you can either:
a) add or update content to improve the quality of your site
b) buy a worthless https certificate (for $150/year or so)
While I am a strong believer that https should be applied wherever appropriate, I am not sure "everywhere" is appropriate.
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Google has said why they're doing this: because it's good for everyone if all sites used HTTPS as a matter of standard practice, and they want to encourage it.
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Google Now
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Google has always filtered on things other than relevance (site reputation as defined by the number of sites that link to it comes to mind.) This does seem in line with that.
However, more recently, Google has been filtering more and more heavily on signals that don't relate to relevance. For instance, they down-rate or omit sites that are offensive to powerful interests (the most recent example being the RTBF, but there were many before that.)
So, in a sense, the relevance ship has been out of port for a long time.
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