Editor’s Note: This article will be updated regularly. Last updated on October 20, 2023.

The Google search algorithm is a highly sophisticated system that helps millions of people around the world find the information they’re looking for in a matter of seconds. Although each search happens in an instant, there’s a lot going on behind the scenes.

咕gle analyzes your search query, matches thousands of web pages that may hold relevant information, ranks them based on hundreds of signals, considers context such as your physical location, and then returns the results in a format that is intuitive to understand.

Every year, Google makes hundreds of updates to its core and periphery search algorithms. We’ve created a guide for the most important updates from each year since the first major update in 2000.

google update history

2023

Spam and Core Updates — October — Confirmed

咕gle has completed its October update rollout, kicking off the month with an update tospam coverageand another to itsCore Algorithm. The former improves its spam detection systems’ coverage of language and spam types, while the latter impacts search rankings and user experience. In particular, the October 2023 Core Algorithm Update aims to enhance search quality and minimize spam content in the results.

Helpful Content System — September — Confirmed

咕gle has launched the Helpful Content System, a pivotal update to its ranking algorithm. Engineered to assess the value and relevance of web content, this new framework stands to have lasting effects on search engine rankings. It calls for a comprehensive reevaluation of existing content strategies, placing a heightened emphasis on user satisfaction and content quality.

Broad Core Update— March — Confirmed

2023年3月核心更新——在马宣布rch 15, completed 13 days later — was Google’s first of this year (and first since September 2022). Google said nothing to indicate this change had any intent beyond its ongoing efforts to promote quality content.Analysisfrom thoseon the SEO beatindicated that March’s update seemed more impactful than September’s: Keyword rankings and SERP positions fluctuated for numerous websites amid the rollout, though the most dramatic ups and downs occurred during the update’s beginning and middle periods. Anyone concerned about long-term content effects should examine their analytics and see if changes are needed.

Product Reviews Update— February — Confirmed

咕gle announced the most recent update to its product reviews system Feb. 21, 2023, saying the change would fully take effect within about 2 weeks. Unlike Google’s last set of changes to its product reviews system, which specifically addressed English-language reviews deemed helpful, the February update intended to make the systemmore internationally useful: Google Product Reviews now promotes helpful reviews in Spanish, German, French, Italian, Vietnamese, Indonesian, Russian, Dutch, Portuguese, Polish and English. This was the first update to Product Reviews since September 2022 and the sixth of its kind overall.

2022

Link Spam Update— December — Confirmed

According to Google, the launch of this update was meant to neutralize spammy links and lessen the credit unnatural links may hold. With this update, Google can detect any sites that buy links for ranking purposes and web pages that are used to pass outgoing links. This renovation started on December 14, and was meant to take about two weeks but has surpassed that time frame due to the holidays.

Helpful Content System Update— December — Confirmed

This helpful content system update is the first big upgrade since its launch in August 2022. The goal of Google’s renovation of its helpful content system is to detect more forms of low-quality web pages. The types of content that this update focuses on are mainly articles that use keyword stuffing, unoriginal work and any other writing that’s made for search engine algorithms rather than the reader.

Spam Update— October — Confirmed

On October 21, 2022, Google released the latest version of its software that detects and manages spammy content to improve the search experience. This update was global and only took 48 hours to fully implement, but there was no specification on whether Google was focused on changing links or content.

Product Reviews Update— September — Confirmed

When Google completes product reviews, the company looks at automated ranking systems to make sure users have access to the most in-depth feedback and research-driven summaries. This product review was the second of 2022, and the fifth update overall, and was specifically focused on helpful English-language reviews.

Core Update— September — Confirmed

This was the second core update of 2022, with the first being the May 2022 update. This newest renovation of Google’s search ranking algorithm and systems aims at ranking the best content for search queries. The rollout of this update was complete as of September 26, 2022.

Helpful Content Update— August — Confirmed

According to Google, theHelpful Content Update旨在解决内容迎合烤焦ch engine algorithms instead of people — for example, articles that use keyword stuffing and other flawed SEO techniques. Unoriginal and low-quality content will be filtered out of Google’s top search results, saving searchers the frustration of hunting through irrelevant information parroted by multiple sites. Going forward, the engine will favor content “by people, for people.”

Core Update— May — Confirmed

咕gle’s core update was a mid-year adjustment to its ranking algorithm with the intent of evolving in line with user behavior and content variety.

Product Algorithm Update— March — Confirmed

Just a few months after its previous product review update, Google launched another algorithm change that re-ranks and re-prioritizes what it deems authentic, in-depth user reviews. As Google Shopping, Google Images and rich snippets continue to drive transactional user behavior, Google’s ability to properly display key product elements such as qualitative and quantitative reviews is paramount.

Page Experience Update— February — Confirmed

A page experience update hit desktop SERPs, which was essentially a duplicate of the mobile experience update saving the requirement that pages be mobile-friendly. Some of the factors weighed in the algorithm include HTTPS and Core Web Vitals.

2021

Product Review Update— December — Confirmed

To more prominently feature comprehensive, useful product reviews in search, Google updated its product review algorithm and guidance. As any searcher has encountered, short summaries of products are often unhelpful, redundant and, at times, bot-generated. By boosting thoughtful, multimedia reviews, Google is making an effort to better serve users with content that best informs their purchasing decisions.

Local Search Update— November — Confirmed

咕gle’s persistent effort to optimize the local search experience was evident when it effectively rebalanced the ranking factors it considers in local SERPs. While nothing major changed, the update suggests an ebb and flow among various local factors to which marketers must be attuned.

Broad Core Update— November — Confirmed

In another two-week algorithm update, Google’s November change brought temporary volatility to webmasters but otherwise went largely unnoticed.

咕gle Spam Update— November — Confirmed

In line with past spam updates, Google’s algorithm change was designed to improve the search experience by weeding out deceptive content practices.

咕gle Link Spam Algorithm Update— July — Confirmed

咕gle took aim at nefarious linking tactics, including affiliate content and guest posts, with an update that will be more capable of identifying, addressing and removing link spam wherever it exists. Marketers engaging in large-scale link-swapping or paid link campaigns may likely see volatile, declining metrics as a result.

July 2021 Core Update— July — Confirmed

In a two-week process July 1-July 12, Google revealed few specifics about a Core update it deployed. The algorithm update was apparently a continuation of the June update a month prior.

Spam Update– June – Confirmed

On June 23 and 28, Google carried out 2 spam updates. These serve to keep search engine results pages free from spammy content that could be dangerous for users. Owners of legitimate websites have little to worry about, but should ensure their site isproperly protected against hackers.

Page Experience Update– June – Confirmed

咕gle will release the long-anticipatedPage Experience Updatein mid-June. This is a big update that impacts how Google ranks sites based on their UX. Site owners should ensure their webpages look and behave the way they’re meant to. Additionally, this update allows non-AMP content to populate the mobile Top Stories carousel for the first time (as long as it follows Google News Policies).

June 2021 Core Update– June – Confirmed

On June 2, Google announced it was releasing thefirst of 2 core updateslanding this summer. The two-part nature of this release is due to the amount of changes the search engine wanted to include; some portions of it weren’t ready in time for a June release, so it was divided. As a result, site owners should note that changes they may see following the first round of updates may fluctuate again with July’s release.

Product Reviews Update– April – Confirmed

To provide shoppers with the most comprehensive information about a product, Google announced its update to the way it ranks product reviews. The search engine willprioritize reviews that offer unique information, analysis and research on the product over those that simply list products or features.

Featured Snippets drop– February/March – Unconfirmed

On February 19, 2021, many websites lost previously secured Featured Snippet positions. These particularly affected YMYL sites, andsingle-word or otherwise very short (and competitive) queries, according to Moz. Marie Haynes reported that many whose FS disappeared during this time saw them return on March 11.

Passage-Based Ranking– February – Confirmed

咕gle announced a new indexing method intended toidentify the most relevant information from a particular webpagefor a given query, no matter where on the page it lies. In other words, this update allows Google to rank passages on a webpage, not just the full webpage as a whole. In practice, this means more helpful answers should populate Featured Snippets. This update is expected to impact 7% of searches worldwide once fully rolled out.

2020

December 2020 Core Update– December – Confirmed

咕gle announced its end-of-2020 update on December 3. There are no details about how certain pages may be impacted, or clues as to what types of content might experience changes in SERP positioning. Sites that see changes may need to review the content of the pages that are impacted, and look for ways to improve them according to SEO best practices.

咕gle Image Search Update– November – Confirmed

On February 11, 2021, Google retroactively announced that it had made a change to Google Image Search toreduce duplicate imagesappearing in results. The search engine also improved filter options available in image searches to refine queries that could be ambiguous, e.g. jaguar (do you mean the car? The animal? The Jacksonville, Florida, football team?).

May 2020 Core Update– May – Confirmed

咕gle announced this core algorithm update on May 4. The search engine didn’t provide information about what, specifically, is included in the update, or clues as to what types of content or sites might experience fluctuations in ranking.

Featured snippet update– January – Confirmed

In an effort to declutter page 1, Google no longer allows pages that are used in a featured snippetto also own a separate organic page 1 listing. This affects 100% of search results globally, but doesn’t impact a few types of featured snippets (namely, video featured snippets, top stories and interesting finds).

2019

BERT Update– October – Confirmed

The Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers Update – BERT for short – was calledone of the biggest leaps forward in the history of Search, and the biggest change in the past five years. It changed the way Google interprets queries to consider how each word in a sequence relates to all other words in a sequence. This makes it easier for Google to understand complex or conversational queries, which in turn helps SERPs present the most applicable information available.

Site Diversity Update– June – Confirmed

咕gle announced that this update would improve SERPS with more than two duplicate sites on page one. The goal of this algorithm tweak is to create more diverse SERPs to give readers more options. The updaterecognizes subdomains as part of the main domain. Branded queries aren’t likely to be impacted, however. For example, searching for Amazon will still result in a page of Amazon links.

June 2019 Core Update– June – Confirmed

In a rare occurrence, Google announced this core update a day before its release. Sites previously affected by the March 2019 Core Update and the 2018 Medic Update reported ranking fluctuations. Some experts believethe update impacted YMYL pagesthat do not meet E.A.T. (Expertise, Authority, Trustworthiness) quality guidelines.

March 2019 Core Update– March – Confirmed

Though Google confirmed a broad core update in early March, the company provided no details about what it changed. Some sitessaw their rankings fluctuate, though not significantly. Google noted that there would be no way to “fix” pages that experienced a performance drop, because they had not been directly impacted; rather, previously under-rewarded pages were benefitting from the update.

2018

Medic Update– August – Confirmed

This update to Google’s core algorithm had a major impact on what Google calls “Your money or your life” pages. These are pages that Google has deemed potentially harmful to a user’s happiness, health or financial stability. This update reduced the likelihood that fear-mongering health websiteswould appear at the top of SERPs.

Mobile Speed Boost– July – Confirmed

咕gle announced that it wouldinclude page speed as a ranking factorin searches conducted on mobile devices. This move was meant to encourage developers to provide faster user experiences.

Video Carousel Update– June – Confirmed

In June 2018, Google stopped showing video results as organic results. In the latest version, videos weremoved to a carouselthat shows three video results at a time.

Snippet Length Reduction– May – Confirmed

Less than half a year since Google increased the limit for page meta descriptions,the decision was reversed. Once again, meta descriptions are limited to between 150-160 characters.

Mobile-First Indexing– March – Confirmed

After a year and a half of experimentation, Google officially rolled out itsmobile-first indexing strategy. From now on, mobile versions of webpages will be used for indexing before desktop versions. Around this time, search from mobile devices was beginning to surpass desktop traffic.

2017

Maccabees– December – Unconfirmed

Though never officially announced, Maccabees is likely several smaller updates that were rolled out around the same time. Industry insidersnoticed unusual fluctuations in web traffic, including unseasonable drops near the holidays.

Snippet Increase– November – Confirmed

Prior to this update, page meta descriptions were limited to 155 characters. Googleincreased the limit to 300, allowing for more in-depth content.

Featured Snippets Update– October – Unconfirmed

In October 2016, webmasters noticed adrop in featured snippetsfor common search terms. This update remains unconfirmed.

咕gle Jobs– June – Confirmed

Using data from major career websites, Google began tolist job opportunitiesat the top of relevant SERPs.

Fred– March – Unconfirmed

This unconfirmed search engine update furtherthwarted spam effortsfrom black hat SEOs and generally improved the quality of results.

Intrusiveness Penalty Update– January – Confirmed

After announcing the update five months earlier, Googlerolled out penaltiesfor mobile sites with pop-ups and interstitials that impede the user experience.

2016

Penguin 4.0– September/October – Confirmed

In September 2016, Google officiallyrolled Penguin into its core algorithm. In doing so, Google also softened Penguin penalties, instead devaluing bad links. Throughout October, Google continued to roll back harsh Penguin penalties.

Possum– September – Unconfirmed

Though never announced by Google, this update made somesignificant changes to local search. For instance, businesses located outside of official city limits began to appear in SERPs. Broadly, this update made the user’s location history more important than ever. A user’s browsing history may also have some weight in how pages are ranked in results.

Mobile Update 2– May – Confirmed

As more web traffic came from mobile devices, Google doubled down on its mobile experience. This updateincreased the effect of the ranking signalto push mobile-friendly sites higher in SERPs.

AdWords Update– February – Confirmed

In February 2016, Google removed AdWords contentfrom the right-hand columnand placed four ad-blocks at the top of SERPs containing commercial/shopping-oriented search queries.

2015

RankBrain– October – Confirmed

The RankBrain algorithmadded machine-learning capabilitiesto Google Search. At launch, RankBrain improved the relevancy of results that do not specifically include query terms. Though this update likely launched sometime in the spring of 2015, it wasn’t officially announced until October.

质量更新– May – Confirmed

This broad update tweaked how Google’s core algorithm identified quality content. Though Google didn’t offer much insight into exactly what changed, some sitessaw a significant drop in traffic.

Mobile Update– April – Confirmed

In what many SEOs called “Mobilegeddon” at the time, Google announced thatmobile rankings would differ from desktop rankings. For instance, if a user was searching on mobile, the algorithm would prioritize mobile-friendly websites.

e-Commerce Update– February – Unconfirmed

尽管没有被谷歌证实,许多网站管理员noticed fluctuations in site traffic in February 2015. Many suspect that Google tweaked how its algorithmhandled incorrect spellings of common brand names.

2014

Pigeon Expansion– December – Confirmed

At the end of 2014, Googledrolled out its Pigeon updateto the UK, Canada and Australia.

Continuous Penguin Updates– December – Confirmed

On Dec. 10, Google announced that it would begin toupdate Penguin continuously, rather than push numbered updates periodically.

DMCA Update– October – Confirmed

In another push against piracy, Google reducedbt网站会出现的可能性in SERPs.

Penguin 3.0– October – Confirmed

咕gle pushed a new version of Penguin in October 2014 butdid not extrapolate on the changes.

“In the news” Update– October – Confirmed

咕gle expanded the number of sites the search engine would display in news results. It alsostreamlined the news box UIwithin SERPs.

HTTPS/SSL Update– August – Confirmed

To make security more of a priority, Googleadded HTTPS as a ranking signal. In other words, more secure websites would be given priority over less secure sites.

Pigeon– July – Confirmed

The Pigeon updates brought together many elements of Google’s core and local search algorithms. With this update, the search engine placed more weight on the user’s location history. This allowed formore in-depth content within the Knowledge Graph, as well as a greater understanding of synonyms.

Authorship Photo Removal– June – Confirmed

In June 2014, Googleofficially removed all authorship photos从搜索页面。

Payday Loan 3.0– June – Confirmed

咕gle became very proactive in its fight against spam,pushing another updatein June 2014 that broadly targeted spammy search queries.

Panda 4.0– May – Confirmed

Another update to Panda further protected SERPs against spammy content and shady SEO tactics. It impactedabout 7.5 percent of queries.

Payday Loan 2.0– May Confirmed

This update targeted specific spam websites and “very spammy queries” in anothereffort to protect users.

2013

Authorship Update– December – Unconfirmed

For a few years, many Google results included information about the page’s author, sometimes including an author portrait next to the search result. With this update,fewer results included this informationand it marked the decline of Google authorship for the foreseeable future.

Hummingbird– August – Confirmed

The major Hummingbird update improved conversational search,laying the groundwork for voice search. It also made local search more precise and increased search speed dramatically. This was Google’s biggest update since Caffeine.

In-depth Articles– August – Confirmed

In August 2013, Google createdanother type of news result“深入的文章。”这些都是常绿派ces such as blog posts with more depth and less dependence on freshness.

Knowledge Graph Expansion– July – Unconfirmed

Knowledge Graph expanded toinclude results about companies– specifically companies with robust Google+ pages. For instance, if a user searched for “Nike,” the search engine would display a card featuring a summary of the company, the location of its headquarters and current stock price.

Payday Loan Update– June – Confirmed

Thissummer updateaddressed how Google would return results of spammy search queries. Specifically, the update went after payday loans and pornography-related results.

Penguin 2.0– June – Confirmed

The new version of Penguin updatedhow spam results were detectedand removed from SERPs.

Domain Crowding– May – Confirmed

With this update, Google reduced the likelihood that a single domain would dominate SERP resultsafter page two.

Phantom– May – Unconfirmed

In May 2013, many websitesreported dropping traffic levels. There was much speculation from webmasters, but no official announcement from Google.

2012

Knowledge Graph Expansion– December – Confirmed

At the end of 2012, Googleexpanded the Knowledge Graphto non-English search queries.

65-Pack Update– October – Confirmed

Thispack of updateswas filled with small algorithm improvements, such as improved UI for movie showtimes and sports scores. It also added better handling of natural language to universal search.

Exact-Match Domains– September – Confirmed

咕gledevalued exact-match domainswith this update. For example a search for cool bow ties would bring up the most relevant bow tie content and not just direct the user to “coolbowties.com.”

7-Result SERPS– August – Unconfirmed

For some search queries, Google began to display seven results instead of 10. Industry insiders claim this updateimpacted 18 percent of keywords.

86-Pack Update– August – Confirmed

This pack included all updates made in the summer of 2012. Mostwere small tweaks, such as a feature to show the live results of soccer games during the European championship.

DMCA Penalty– August – Confirmed

咕gle began to penalize webpages withrepeated copyright violations.

39-Pack Update– June – Confirmed

This pack included updates tohow the algorithm identified hacked pages, made additional autocomplete improvements, rolled out music-related rich snippets at the international level and improved how the algorithm detected fresh content.

Knowledge Graph– May – Confirmed

With this update, SERPs began to feature more content on the right side of the page. Related search results appeared for search queries that could mean more than one thing. The knowledge graph also includedpeople summaries pulled from Wikipedia.

52-Pack Update– May – Confirmed

Thebiggest pack of updates released so far, this one included bug fixes, larger snippets, better handling of non-English languages and internationalization of the search engine’s “Did you mean…?” feature.

Penguin– April – Confirmed

Also known as the “Webspam Update,” Penguinfurther penalized shady SEO tacticslike keyword stuffing.

Panda 3.5– April – Confirmed

Once again, Google updated Panda butdid not announce specific changes.

50-Pack Update– April – Confirmed

Thislarge pack of updatesadded math symbols to autocomplete, improved handling of symbols for indexing and refreshed UI in the News tab.

Panda 3.4– March – Confirmed

For the first time, Google announced an update on Twitter. Without elaborating, the company said that the Panda 3.4 refreshwould impact 1.6 percent of searches.

Venice– February – Confirmed

With Venice, Google made search more local, offering users results that weremore closely tied with their location history.

40-Pack Update– February – Confirmed

This pack of updates wasfilled with minor changes搜索引擎的核心算法以及年代mall bug fixes. It standardized thumbnails in results, tweaked ‘related to’ searches and fine-tuned autocomplete.

Panda 3.3– February – Confirmed

Though Google made no official statement about this update, webmasterssaw growth in organic referralsas a result of tweaks to Panda.

17-Pack Update– February – Confirmed

Thispack of small updatesmade autocomplete faster, improved spelling correction and made minor adjustments to Image Search UI.

Ads Above The Fold– January – Confirmed

In January 2012, Google began to devalue pages that were “top heavy” with ads. Googlepredicted the updatewould impact about 1 percent of searches.

Panda 3.2– January – Confirmed

咕gle “refreshed”the way Panda handled datawith this update. No specifics were given.

Search+Your World– January – Confirmed

With this update, Googleadded Social Search它的搜索页面。When searching for a person the user is connected with on Google+, their profile and relevant information would appear directly in the SERP. As almost all Android users automatically had a Google+ profiles, this update impacted a substantial amount of searches.

30-Pack Update– January – Confirmed

At the beginning of 2012, Google unveiled 30 tweaks to its algorithm, including bug fixes and improved analysis of landing pages for image search. Other updates improved 404 detection, created more rich snippets, updated foreign language searchand more.

2011

10-Pack Update– December – Confirmed

咕gle announced10 small algorithm updates, including more comprehensive indexing, better autocomplete functionality, signals for original content and freshness attributes to image content.

Freshness Update– November – Confirmed

With this update, Googlebegan to reward link freshness. Essentially, new content about time-sensitive topics would be given precedence over older content. For example, if a user searches for “World Series” they’ll get results about this year’s event, not last year’s.

Query Encryption– October – Confirmed

To better protect user privacy as search engine results became more personalized, and relied more on user search history,咕gle implemented SSL encryptionon all search queries from users with a Google account.

Panda 2.5– September – Confirmed

Webmasters reported seeing drops in page rankings as a result of a new update to Panda. However,咕gle did not commenton the changes it made.

Pagination Elements– September – Confirmed

Paginated content had been at risk of being identified as duplicate content prior to this update. To combat this problem, Google introduced therel=”next”andrel=”prev”link attributes.

Expanded Sitelinks– August – Confirmed

When users search for a specific brand or site, the result often includes links to webpages on the domain. In August 2011, Googlereformatted the way these links appear, giving users a better idea of where they’re going when they click a link.

Panda 2.4– August – Confirmed

咕gle extended the Panda algorithm toall non-English search queries, except those made in Chinese, Japanese and Korean.

Panda 2.3– July – Confirmed

咕gle made additional tweaks to its Panda algorithm butdid not provide any specifics.

咕gle+– June – Confirmed

On June 28, 2011, Googlelaunched its Facebook competitor咕gle+. The platform was focused on giving users the ability to share content with their friends, family and colleagues. It was integrated into Gmail at launch.

Panda 2.2– June – Confirmed

This updateimproved scraper detectionby the Panda algorithm.

Schema.org– June – Confirmed

In a joint announcement with Microsoft and Yahoo,咕gle announced Schema.org, a foundation for helping developers and site owners to learn about structured data and how to make their sites appear in SERPs. The announcement not only formalized existing types of microdata but also introduced new types.

Panda 2.1– May – Confirmed

咕gle confirmed that it made slight tweaks to the Panda algorithm in May 2011 butdidn’t share any details.

Panda 2– April – Confirmed

咕gleextended the Panda updateto all English search queries worldwide. With this new rollout, Google also included algorithm improvements to weed out low-quality websites and boost the accuracy of results.

+1 Button– March – Confirmed

In March 2011, Googleadded the +1 buttonto its search engine. Users could click this button to essentially recommend links and sites to other users. The more button presses a link received, the higher it went in SERPs.

Panda– February – Confirmed

To address complaints about thin and spammy content making its way to the front page of search results, Google introduced the Panda update. Targeting “content farms” that lured in users only to show them more ads than content, this updateimpacted roughly 12 percent of all search results.

Attribution Update– January – Confirmed

This update reduced the chances of spammy links appearing in Google results. For example, if a webpage was stolen and reposted to another domain, Google would bemore likely to show the original copy.

Overstock.com Penalty– January – Unconfirmed

On Feb. 24, The Wall Street Journal reported that Overstock.com had beenartificially boosting its SERP rankingsby encouraging colleges and universities to post links to its website in exchange for student and faculty discounts. Because .edu domains carry significant authority, links from these sites sent Overstock.com to the top of SERPs. JCPenny was caught by the New York Timespracticing similar tactics. Google penalized both companies.

2010

Negative Reviews– December – Confirmed

On Nov. 26, The New York Times reported thatsomething disturbing was happeningon Google SERPs. Essentially, companies could get their sites to the top of search results by abusing their customers. For example, a company might take a customer’s money but never deliver the promised product or service. Inevitably, a flood of negative reviews would appear on the site. The Google algorithm would consider this a positive and push the website further up the rankings where more people would encounter it. From there, the cycle would continue.

Less than a week after the story broke, Googleamended its algorithmto punish websites and companies that treat their customers poorly.

Social Signals– December – Unconfirmed

In addition to the traditional signals used to score page rankings such as page authority and meta tags, Google and other search engines began to incorporate social signals. Pages that were shared or “liked” frequently on social media websitesgained a bump in rankings.

Instant Previews– November – Confirmed

After rolling out Google Instant, the search giant added a newvisual search feature它的搜索页面。用户可以点击放大glass icon near each SERP listing to see a preview of the webpage. This encouraged site owners to put more effort into their site design.

咕gle Instant– September – Confirmed

With this update, Google Suggestevolved into Google Instant, which displayed results as a query was being typed. One way Instant differed from Suggest was the inclusion of localization. For example, if a user in Boston began to search for “coffee shops,” it might predict the queries “coffee shops in Boston” or “coffee shops in Cambridge MA.”

Brand Update– August – Unconfirmed

Beginning in August 2010, Google allowed domains toappear multiple times on a SERP. Prior to this update, a domain could only appear in one or two listings.

Caffeine– June – Confirmed

咕gle claims that the Caffeine update provided a50 percent increase in search speed. By more closely tying together crawling and indexing, Google’s algorithm was able to ensure that the results presented to users were as fresh as possible.

May Day– May – Confirmed

The May Day update significantly reduced the strength of long-tail traffic. Specifically, Google lowered the ranking of pages that contained keywords butwere thin on content. For example, ecommerce pages that only listed a single product and a small description.

咕gle Places– April – Confirmed

With the April 2010 update, the Local Business Centerbecame Google Places. Place pages were originally a part of of Maps, but soon became integrated with local search. Businesses could claim a page, fill out relevant information and include promotional elements such as coupons.

2009

Real-time Search– December – Confirmed

In 2009, social media sites and internet-based news sources were on the rise. To give users the most up-to-date results, Googlerolled out real-time search. When users submitted a query for an event or topic with time-sensitive component, they would see results arrive in real time.

Vince– February – Unconfirmed

Though called a “minor change” by Google at the time, the Vince update appeared togive big brands a leg up in search results.

Rel-Canonical Tag– February – Confirmed

In February 2009, Google, Yahoo and Microsoftjointly announced the canonical tag. This tag tells the search engine which version of a page is the master copy. It can prevent search engines from penalizing syndicated content as a duplicate.

2008

咕gle Suggest– August – Confirmed

In August 2008, Google introducedthe suggest feature we’re so familiar with today. When users typed a query into the Google Search bar, a dropdown menu appeared to suggest potential searches. We may take this functionality for granted today, but it was a novel idea at the time.

Dewey– April – Confirmed

Once again, webmasters noticed page ranking changes but,without any specifics from Google, were unable to pinpoint exactly what had happened. Some experts speculated that Google was further integrating its Google Books product into the search engine.

2007

Buffy– June – Unconfirmed

According to internet lore, the Buffy update wasnamed in honor of Google’s SEO evangelist Vanessa Fox’sdeparture from the company.Buffy the Vampire Slayerwas Fox’s favorite TV show at the time.

Buffy represented a collection of small changes continuing the objectives of the Universal Search update.

Universal Search– May – Confirmed

Perhaps the most radical change to the Google SERP since its inception, the May 2007 updatedid away with the traditional 10-result page. With the new update, Google included news stories, videos, images and local content in all searches.

2006

False Alarm– December – Unconfirmed

Once again, webmasters around the world reported seeing changes to their page rankings, but咕gle denied making any updates.

Supplemental Update– November – Unconfirmed

Though Google made no official announcements, there were a number of updates to the supplemental index throughout 2006. At the time, webmasterswere still confusedas to why some of their pages were indexed differently.

2005

Big Daddy– December – Confirmed

This large infrastructure update launched in December 2005 and was completed by March 2006. Though it didn’t have much impact on search results, Big Daddy changed the way Googledealt with 301/302 redirects, URL canonicalization and supplemental indexes.

咕gle Local/Maps– October – Confirmed

In October 2005, Googlemerged its Maps datawith its recently launched Local Business Center. This update encouraged businesses to update their information with Google to better support local searches.

贾格尔– October – Confirmed

Rolled out between September and November of 2005, Jagger made changes to how Googlehandled low-quality links.

Gilligan– September – Unconfirmed

In September 2005, webmasters reported seeing changes to their page rankings. However, Google denied updating its algorithms. Though likely a matter of semantics over what really constitutes an update, this oneremains a mystery.

XML Sitemaps– June – Confirmed

June 2005 marked the first time webmasters could submit XML sitemaps directly to Google. This gave SEO professionals some influence overhow their sites were crawled.

Personalized Search– June – Confirmed

Prior to this update, Google users needed to manually adjust search engine settings to get personalized results. In June 2005, Google began to utilize user search history toautomatically adjust results.

Bourbon– May – Confirmed

The Bourbon update was unofficially announced by a Webmaster forum user who posted under the screen name “GoogleGuy.” Internet detectives believe GoogleGuy was none other than Matt Cutts, an engineer who worked for Google at the time.

Bourbon made changes to how the Google algorithmhandled 302 redirectsand duplicate content.

Allegra– February – Unconfirmed

Though not announced by Google, webmasters noticed page ranking changes in February 2005. Industry insiders speculated that Google had tweaked itsLatent Semantic Indexing rules.

Nofollow– January – Confirmed

This update was implemented by Google, Microsoft and Yahooat the same time. The nofollow attribute was meant to clean up spam links. Therel=”nofollow”attribute could be added to any link to explicitly state the link had not been approved by the site owner.

2004

Brandy– February – Confirmed

This search engine update introduced the concept of Latent Semantic Indexing, which gave the algorithm the ability to better understand synonyms to aid in keyword analysis. Brandy also developed the idea of “link neighborhoods” which gave more weight tohow sites link to one another.

Austin– January – Unconfirmed

The Austin update continued to打击邪恶的SEO助教cticssuch as meta-tag stuffing and invisible text. Link farms were penalized or banned outright. Content relevancy began to carry weight in page rankings.

2003

Florida– November – Confirmed

Many SEO experts consider Google’s Florida update to signal the beginning of the modern era of SEO. In a single sweep, many webpages werewiped from the first page of search results. Unsavory tactics like stuffing blog posts with keywords were made obsolete.

Supplemental Index– September – Unconfirmed

This update allowed Google to index more pages while maintaining performance standards. SEO experts at the time worried that pages in the supplemental indexwould suffer in page rankings.

Fritz– July – Confirmed

Fritz changed the way Google made updates to its algorithm. Rather than overhauling the system on a monthly basis, Fritz allowed Google tomake changes daily.

Esmeralda– June – Unconfirmed

This is the last of Google’s initial monthly planned updates to its search engine. Industry insiders speculate that Esmeralda contained major changes to the infrastructure of Google’s ranking algorithms.

Dominic– May – Unconfirmed

In May 2003, webmasters noticed Google bots named Freshbot and Deepcrawler scouring their websites. It also seems that Dominic altered the way Google counted and reported backlinks.

Cassandra– April – Unconfirmed

The Cassandra update cracked down on nefarious SEO tricks such as hidden text and links. It also made it more difficult for webmasters to generate link authority from co-owned domains.

Boston– February – Confirmed

The first named Google update was announced at the annual technical meeting of the Society of Engineering Science at Northeastern University. At the time, Google planned to release monthly updates to its algorithm, but this strategy was quickly abandoned for daily updates.

2002

1st Documented Update– September – Unconfirmed

In autumn 2002, webmasters noticed differences in the search engine’s PageRank algorithm. Rather than solving many issues, SEO insidersreported seeing more 404 pagesas well as pages ranking for unrelated keywords.

2000

咕gle Toolbar– December – Confirmed

In the beginning, there was the Google Toolbar, a browser plugin that showed users the importance of pages with Google’s PageRank technology. Read咕gle’s announcementthat began all the SEO conversations that continue to this day.

Alexander Santo is a Brafton writer living in Washington. He enjoys searching for the perfect cup of coffee, browsing used book shops and attending punk rock concerts.