Google will stop reporting six deprecated structured data types in Search Console and remove them from the Rich Results Test and appearance filters. The post Google Drops Search Console Reporting For Six Structured Data Types appeared first on Search Engine Journal .
Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web. Google AI Mode expanded beyond English, into Hindi, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean…
Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI are clear: Structured data shapes AI visibility. Is your brand ready? Read the full breakdown.
New data from Similarweb shows that almost all ChatGPT users also use Google, but only 15% of Google users also use ChatGPT. This shows that Google, for now, is still super dominant, despite ChatGPT’s growth.
Google is dropping support for six of the seven deprecated structured data types it announced back in June. Google Search Console’s Search Console rich result reporting, the Rich Result Test, and the list of Search appearance filters will stop showing on September 9 for Course Info, Claim Review, Estimated Salary, Learning Video, Special Announcement, and Vehicle Listing but not Book Actions.
Google supposedly added two new metrics within the Google Ads AI Max campaigns for improved tracking and reporting. One is named expanded matches and the other is named expanded landing pages.
Google Ads announced new features “aimed at bridging this gap” between your advertising across both your website and app. There are new unified workflows and reporting with in-product nudges, unified conversions, and a combined overview card. Plus a new way to measure app installs from web campaigns.
Since Google launched AI Mode back in March, it has only supported the English language. Google has been releasing it in more countries and expanding it quickly, and now, finally, AI Mode supports more than just English.
Drowning in low-quality AI content? Discover why every team needs a Content Engineer to scale trustworthy content with AI—without sacrificing quality.
Anthropic agreed to a proposed $1.5B settlement over pirated books used to train Claude. If approved, eligible titles would receive about $3,000 each. The post Anthropic Agrees To $1.5B Settlement Over Pirated Books appeared first on Search Engine Journal