Every time Google ships a spam update, the headline becomes "Google is penalizing AI content." It is not — and reading it that way leads creators to exactly the wrong conclusions. What Google targets is scaled content abuse: generating many pages mainly to manipulate rankings without adding value, no matter who or what produced them. Here is what the policy actually says, the timeline from the March 2024 update to the June 2026 spam update rolling out right now, the patterns that get hit, and how to produce AI-assisted content that stays on the right side of the line.
Every Google spam update spawns the same headline: "Google is cracking down on AI content." It is the wrong reading, and acting on it costs people in both directions. Creators who believe AI content is banned either abandon a legitimate productivity tool out of fear, or — worse — assume that since they are doomed anyway, polish does not matter. Creators who notice their AI pages survived conclude the crackdown is a myth and keep mass-producing thin content right up until an update finally catches them. Both camps are reasoning from a premise Google has stated, repeatedly, is false.
Google does not penalize content for being AI-generated. It penalizes scaled content abuse — and the difference between those two statements is the whole game. This guide lays out what the policy actually says, the timeline from the March 2024 update through the June 2026 spam update rolling out as this is written, the specific patterns that get demoted, and how to produce AI-assisted content that lands on the right side of the line. The companion guide on making AI-generated content not look like AI covers the craft side; this one is about the policy and the search consequences.
Google formally introduced scaled content abuse as a named spam policy in the March 2024 update, announced on March 5, 2024, alongside two related policies — site reputation abuse (publishing low-value third-party content on an established site to borrow its ranking authority) and expired domain abuse (buying an expired domain to repurpose its history for unrelated low-value content). Scaled content abuse is the one that gets read as "the AI policy," but its wording is careful and worth quoting precisely: it covers cases where "many pages are generated for the primary purpose of manipulating search rankings and not helping users."
Read that sentence slowly, because every clause is load-bearing. "Many pages" — the policy is about scale, not a single article. "For the primary purpose of manipulating search rankings" — the test is intent and effect on rankings. "And not helping users" — the disqualifier is the absence of value. Generative AI appears in Google's examples as one way to produce pages at scale, listed next to scraping other sites, stitching content together from multiple sources without adding value, and feed-spinning. It is named as a tool that can be misused, not as a prohibited input. The policy is method-agnostic by design.
Google has compressed its stance into a principle it keeps returning to: it cares about the quality of content, not how it was produced. Automation that produces genuinely helpful, original work is fine; a human typing out a hundred near-identical thin pages by hand violates the same policy as a script that generates them. The dividing line is not the presence of AI. It is whether the content exists to help a person who searched for something, or to occupy a ranking slot. That reframing matters because it tells you what to fix: not "remove the AI," but "add the value and the intent the AI output is missing."
Understanding the cadence helps you read what each new update is and is not. The spam policies have been stable since 2024; what changes is how aggressively Google's automated systems enforce them.
The March 2024 update did two things at once: a core ranking improvement aimed at reducing unoriginal, low-quality content in results, and the new spam policies above. Google initially estimated the combined changes would cut low-quality, unoriginal content in results by 40%; in an April 2024 follow-up it reported the reduction came in closer to 45%. This is the moment scaled content abuse went from an informal concern to an enforceable, named policy with manual actions and algorithmic demotions behind it.
In January 2025 Google updated its Search Quality Rater Guidelines — the manual used by human evaluators who assess search quality and whose judgments train and validate ranking systems — with explicit AI-content criteria. The guidelines instruct raters to apply the lowest rating to pages whose main content is auto- or AI-generated with little or no added value or originality, and they fold AI into the existing definitions of spam and scaled abuse. Crucially, the same guidelines call generative AI a useful tool and do not penalize disclosed, value-adding AI use. The signal to ranking systems is value and originality, not authorship.
Google has shipped spam updates on a roughly twice-a-year rhythm since. The August 2025 spam update began on August 26, 2025 and took about four weeks to finish rolling out in late September. The March 2026 spam update started on March 24, 2026 and completed in under a day — the fastest confirmed spam rollout on record. None of these introduced new policies; each was an improvement to detection accuracy, largely powered by SpamBrain, Google's AI-based spam-prevention system.
Google confirmed the June 2026 spam update on its Search Status Dashboard on June 24, 2026, at around 9:00 a.m. Pacific, stating it "applies globally and to all languages" and that "the rollout may take a few days to complete." As with the others, it is a refinement of Google's automated spam-detection systems with no new policy attached — the second spam update of 2026. If your search traffic moved in the last few days, this is the most likely cause; Google's standard advice is to check Search Console, review the spam policies, and remember that recovery from a fixed issue can take months because systems re-evaluate slowly.
Penalties — algorithmic demotions and, in clearer cases, manual actions — cluster around a recognizable profile, and it is not "used AI." It is the scaled-abuse fingerprint: large numbers of pages published fast, built around keyword permutations rather than questions real people ask, with thin factual depth, no first-hand experience, no named expertise, and a near-identical structure repeated across the set. The tell is templated sameness at volume. When hundreds of pages share the same skeleton and say nothing a competent source would not already cover, the intent reads as ranking manipulation regardless of whether a human or a model filled in the blanks.
The inverse profile survives updates comfortably. A page that answers a specific question, contributes information or a point of view that is not already everywhere, shows evidence of real experience or expertise, and was clearly edited by someone who cared is exactly what Google is trying to reward — and whether a model helped draft it is invisible and irrelevant to that judgment. The slop backlash and the quality line are covered in depth in the guide on AI content engines for social media; the short version is that the spam updates are Google enforcing the same line in web search.
The defensive posture is not "avoid AI." It is "run AI inside an editorial process that adds the value scaled abuse lacks." A few principles do most of the work.
Anchor every piece to real expertise or experience — the E-E-A-T axis Google evaluates. A model can assemble what is already public; it cannot supply your first-hand result, your data, your contrarian read, or the detail only someone who has actually done the thing would include. That added layer is the difference between a page that helps and a page that occupies a slot. Add original information, not just rephrased consensus. Edit and fact-check before publishing — unreviewed model output is where hallucinations and generic filler slip through, and an editorial pass is the single clearest signal that a human stood behind the page. Keep publication velocity sane: a sudden flood of structurally identical pages is the loudest scaled-abuse signal there is, so favor fewer, deeper pages over a content dump. And disclose AI use where it is relevant; concealment is what turns a tolerable practice into a trust problem if it surfaces.
One distinction saves a lot of misplaced worry: the spam updates govern Google web search, which is the ranking of pages on websites. Most short-form social and video output — Reels, TikToks, Shorts, carousels, persona videos — is ranked by each platform's own feed algorithm, not by Google's web index, so a Google spam update does not directly demote your TikTok. The risk surface for a creator is the web-search-facing content you publish: blog posts and articles on your own site or a hosted blog. That is where scaled content abuse applies and where the discipline above matters most.
That does not make social a free-for-all — platform algorithms run their own quality and spam systems, and the broader move toward rewarding originality over volume is industry-wide, not just Google's. But it does tell you where to concentrate the editorial rigor: your owned, indexable web content is the part a Google spam update can reach, so that is the part to govern most tightly. For the search-visibility side of this in the AI-answer era, see the guides on AI SEO and brand visibility in chat-driven discovery and AI visibility beyond SEO.
It would be dishonest to pretend a content engine sidesteps this policy. Kompozy generates content with AI, and the spam updates judge output and intent, not brand names — so the honest claim is narrower and more useful: Kompozy is architected for the kind of work that stays on the right side of the line, and no tool, including this one, exempts a careless workflow from the rules. Point any generator at producing five hundred thin keyword pages and that is scaled content abuse whether the button said Kompozy or not.
What Kompozy is actually built for is the opposite pattern. Its blog and article output — the part that touches Google web search — is generated from a written Persona Brief that encodes a real voice and point of view, governed by banned-word filters, and produced as individual on-brand pieces tied to one consistent identity rather than a keyword-permutation dump. A per-post review gate sits in front of publishing, so a human reads the output before it ships, which is precisely the editorial pass the scaled-abuse profile is missing. And blog publishing targets your own destinations — GHL Blog, WordPress, or a custom webhook — meaning the value accrues to a site you own and stand behind, not a throwaway domain. Used as intended, that is a workflow of fewer, governed, reviewed, original pieces, which is the exact inverse of the scaled-abuse fingerprint.
The larger point is that the bulk of what Kompozy produces — Persona Shorts, Persona HeyGen and VFX video, Persona Frames, Carousels, Quote Graphics, Persona Photos, Text Posts, and Email Newsletters fanned across nine social platforms plus email — lives in feeds Google's spam updates do not rank, while the part that does face web search is the part the Persona Brief, the filters, and the review gate were designed to keep original and human-backed. The engine lets you move at volume on the surfaces where volume is safe, and apply real editorial discipline on the one surface where it is not. For the craft of keeping that output from reading as generic, pair this with the guide on making AI content not look like AI and the glossary entries on the Persona Brief and quality gates.
Google's spam updates have never penalized AI-generated content for being AI-generated. They penalize scaled content abuse — pages produced at volume to manipulate rankings without adding value — and that policy applies to humans and machines identically. The March 2024 update wrote the rule down, the January 2025 quality-rater guidelines told evaluators to mark low-effort AI pages as lowest quality, and the spam updates since, including the one rolling out in June 2026, have steadily sharpened enforcement of the same line. The instruction that falls out of all of it is simple and stable: do not produce thin pages at scale to chase rankings. Produce genuinely useful, original, reviewed work — with AI in the loop or not — and ship it on channels you own. That is the practice the updates reward, and the one worth building around.
No — not for being AI-generated. Google's position, repeated across its spam policies and Search guidance, is that it cares about the quality and intent of content, not how it was produced. AI-written pages can rank well when they show real originality, expertise, and value. What gets penalized is scaled content abuse: producing pages mainly to manipulate rankings rather than help people. That applies whether the pages were written by automation, humans, or a combination.
It is Google's spam policy, introduced in the March 2024 update, defining the practice where "many pages are generated for the primary purpose of manipulating search rankings and not helping users." Google names generative AI as one example of the automation that can be misused this way, alongside scraping, page-stitching, and feed-spinning — but the policy is deliberately method-agnostic. The trigger is the volume-for-rankings intent and the lack of added value, not the tool.
Yes. Google confirmed the June 2026 spam update on its Search Status Dashboard on June 24, 2026, around 9:00 a.m. Pacific, applying globally and to all languages, with a rollout expected to take a few days. It is a standard improvement to Google's automated spam-detection systems, including SpamBrain — Google announced no new spam policies alongside it. It is the second spam update of 2026, after the March 2026 update that finished in under a day.
Treat AI as a drafting tool inside a real editorial process, not a page-printing machine. Anchor every piece to genuine expertise or experience, add original information a model could not produce on its own, edit and fact-check before publishing, and keep publication velocity sane — a sudden flood of near-identical pages is the clearest scaled-abuse signal. In January 2025 Google's quality-rater guidelines instructed raters to give the lowest rating to pages whose main content is auto- or AI-generated with little or no added value, so the bar is human value, not human authorship.
Not by itself — but no tool exempts you from the policy. The spam updates judge the output and the intent, so a tool is only as safe as the workflow you run it in. Kompozy is built for the opposite of scaled abuse: branded social, video, and blog content tied to a written Persona Brief, a consistent identity, banned-word filters, and a per-post human review gate, published to your own channels. Point any generator at mass thin keyword pages and that is still scaled content abuse; use it to produce governed, original, reviewed work and you are on the right side of the line.
Google's spam updates target scaled content abuse — generating many pages mainly to manipulate search rankings without adding value for users — not AI-generated content itself. The policy, introduced in the March 2024 update on March 5, 2024, is method-agnostic: it applies whether pages are written by automation, humans, or both. The June 2026 spam update, confirmed on June 24, 2026 and rolling out globally, continues sharpening Google's automated systems (including SpamBrain) against that pattern, with no new policies attached. AI-assisted pages rank fine when they show real originality, expertise, and human value.
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