7 ways to remove Google results
How do you get something removed from a Google search? There are seven ways to remove content from Google searches (without going to an attorney). You can click below to jump to a particular heading.
- Ask people to delete their content
- Remove content at the publisher level
- Ask people to change their content
- Make a page invisible to Google
- Google removal
- Suppress visibility
- Removing negative reviews
Quick stats on damaging content
If your brand (business or personal) is having problems with negative search results, you aren’t going to like this statistic: 65% of people trust search engines for research.
When something negative appears in search results like those of Google or Bing, most people and businesses want to know how to remove it.
Here are some interesting statistics on search results and reviews:
- Only 5% of people look past the first page (10 positions) of Google.
- 85% of consumers trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations.
- 60% of consumers say that negative reviews made them not want to use a business.
- 49% of consumers need at least a four-star rating before using a business.
- Most people will not do business with a company once they read a single negative review. Ouch.
What people see online about a brand, whether personal brand, company or products, or services, can make or break opportunities.
Whether search results are true or not is less important – people tend to believe search results either way.
Can Google remove information from a website?
Google cannot delete information from a website. Still, once it’s been removed, Google will usually remove the listing from its search results within a few days.
Steps to delete online content
One of the actions below will almost always work to get negative content removed from the internet. Jump to any item:
- Ask people to delete their content
- Remove content at the publisher level
- Ask people to change their content
- Make a page invisible to Google
- Google removal
- Suppress visibility
- Removing negative reviews
1. Ask the author to delete it
First, the bad news. In our 15+ years of experience, we’ve found that a Webmaster will most often not remove online content because they put it there in the first place. Perhaps it’s just human pride. But sometimes, they will remove it. Either way, it’s worth a shot to ask.
It often comes down to finding what they want. What motivates them?
Incentives used to remove content
We’ve made some pretty interesting offers for our clients to get them to remove online content. Here are some examples:
- We’ve given to charities in their name (or their kid’s little league team)
- We’ve provided direct payment to the author
- We’ve paid the owner of the site to take something down
- We’ve shown them the error of their ways. For example, someone accused but found not guilty can sometimes how proof of innocence and good publishers may take it down (most publishers are “bad,” by the way)
People are motivated by many things. You might be surprised by what works.
Think about your approach before asking
Every author who may have published something negative online is different. A little research can go a long way in finding out what motivates someone and what is most likely to convince them to consider your request.
Note: It’s also usually easier to work with people rather than companies – companies have lawyers, and lawyers are often paid to be combative.
Many times, you may not want to contact the author because they may use your appeal as a reason to create more contact about your brand – making things worse. So think before asking someone to remove content. You don’t want to make things worse.
Now that you’ve thought about it – if you feel contacting the author to get online content deleted is the right approach, here are a few ways to get people to take down a blog post, article, video, or other online content.
Motivating someone to act
- Appeal to their altruistic side: “You had every right to post that review. I hope I’ve made it right. At this point, the post is really damaging my business – would you mind removing or updating it?”
- Try the charity angle: “I see you support the local little league. I know removing the post you wrote might take some of your valuable time. I’d be happy to donate to the _____________ little league in your name or anonymously as a thank you for taking it down.”
- Take the capitalist route: “I’d like to sponsor the page you wrote about our business. We’ll request a few modifications, and you’ll be well compensated for your time.” Note: Modifications may mean removing the business’ name, adding a special meta tag to make Google ignore the page (noindex), or removing the page altogether.
Asking someone to remove content can have downsides
This has been mentioned above, but it’s worth mentioning again. Reputation X works with attorneys who have made the sometimes huge error of sending a legal demand letter to a webmaster only to have the information added to the original page. Then, people comment on the newly refreshed content. Google often responds by making negative content rise in search results.
Email is convenient, but voices communicate better
A phone call is usually a better method of communicating with someone for the following reasons:
- It’s better the request comes from a human, not an email. The human voice can communicate emotion far better than written methods. If you have a true story of how the post is affecting you, a phone call is the way to go – if you can.
- Here’s another reason to use a phone call if you can: A voice conversation can’t be copied and pasted onto the internet directly. If a person wants to do you harm, the last thing you want to do is give them an easy way to copy and paste your plea onto the internet.
Why do search results rise in search results when refreshed?
Search engines like fresh content because it is seen as more relevant and timely. This is true for all online content, but the impact of freshness depends on the type of content it is. The news content must be very fresh – it’s news, after all – and by its nature, has a limited shelf life. Blog content is less so, but it’s still important. If you want to learn more about the algorithm, check out this post.
Email script to ask someone to remove web content
Here’s a simple email script that you can use. Customize it for a person or company as you see fit:
“Hey [author name], I hope you’re doing well. I’m [your name], [your designation] at [your company name]. One of your recent posts mentioned [state the inaccuracies in the post]. Not only is this incorrect, but it also gives our company a bad name. [Article URL here] I am kindly requesting you edit your article and remove the inaccurate information that I’ve just highlighted. Alternatively, you can remove the article completely or even add a special tag to it that will cause Google to skip the article, but your readers can still read it. The tag is called a NoIndex tag, and your webmaster will know about it and can add it in less than a minute. I’d be happy to discuss this in more detail if you have any questions. I’d appreciate it if you can make this change ASAP; it’s really hurting us. Thanks,[Your name][Company Name] “ |
Don’t get angry
You might be angry that someone is (apparently) trying to destroy your life or your life work, but don’t be aggressive. See how the author responds. You can, of course, change this email script according to your requirements. If you don’t receive a response or you receive a “no” answer, continue reading.
2. Have content removed at the publisher level
If the author won’t remove the content, or you think it is a bad idea to even ask, consider asking the webmaster or publisher of the site upon which the information lives to remove the page completely.
This doesn’t often work on personal blogs because the webmaster, publisher, editor, and author are often all the same person. But it can work on medium-sized sites like local or small-town news sites. In this case, the person to ask might not be the same person that wrote it. It might be their Editor.
How to find who owns a website to ask for a removal
To find the owner of a site, use a Whois tool like Whois.net or DomainTools. A little research can point you to someone in charge. But sometimes, that information is protected by domain privacy. If a website does not have domain privacy enabled, the name, address, and phone number of the owner of a website will often be visible. A whois record might look like this:
You can also check the Contact Us page of the website or look up employees of the company that owns the site using LinkedIn.com.
When you find the right person, try modified versions of the steps outlined in the tactics to get online content removed section above.
Notice that no lawyers have been called yet. 🙂
3. If authors won’t remove content, they may change it
In a case where the author refuses to remove the content from their websites, they may be willing to edit the content. In this case, ask the webmaster of the site containing the information to remove the search phrases from the page.
Remove the search phrase from the page
For example, if your company name is mentioned on the page and/or the description of the page (in the HTML) and/or the Title of the page (also HTML), the webmaster can change the words so your company name no longer exists on the page.
Here is an example of the “change keywords” tactic:
Let’s say you own a company called “Enron.” And a local publisher wrote a story with the headline “Enron CEO Caught Juggling Kittens.” You’d ask the publisher to change the headline to something like “Local CEO Caught Juggling Kittens.”
The author of the article would edit it to remove all mentions of the company, but the article would still remain. Google would almost certainly drop the page visibility in search results. Why? Because the search phrase mentioning your brand is now gone.
The page may become less visible, but not disappear
The web page may not completely disappear because links from other pages may still mention the search phrase when they link to your site (the text in a link is called the “anchor text”), but the page would no longer be as relevant to search engines and would lose visibility. That means a drop in search results and reduced visibility when someone searches for your brand online.
This can work if the article has been up for quite some time and is no longer generating traffic and income for the publisher. Small publishers sometimes make this sort of change in return for compensation or out of the goodness of their hearts.
Spoiler alert: In our experience, editors rarely act from the goodness of their hearts.
4. How to make a page invisible to Google
A web page doesn’t need to be deleted to disappear from Google. It is possible to ask the publisher to add a NOINDEX tag to the header of the HTML on the page. Unless they are at least a little bit technical, they’ll probably need to have their webmaster add the tag to the offending web page.
It takes about a minute
It can take a webmaster as little as one minute to add a NoIndex tag to a web page. The time isn’t the problem; it’s motivating the people in power to make the call that is the issue.
The article remains but drops from the search results
The good news for the publisher, the article remains. But Google ignores the article and drops it from search results. So will other search engines like Bing. Your company name still exists on the page, but the NOINDEX tag tells search engines not to crawl the page anymore. Within a few weeks, the page is normally removed automatically from search results.
This is what a NOINDEX tag looks like:
<meta name=”robots” content=”noindex”>
Where does the NOINDEX tag go?
You put the NOINDEX tag inside the HEAD code in your HTML. The HEAD code is located at the top of your code. In the example below, we placed the NOINDEX (and NOFOLLOW) code just above the closing statement of the HEAD. The HEAD content is everything between these two tags in the HTML: <HEAD> and </HEAD>.
5. The Google removal request
There are special cases where a search engine will remove information from search results directly. Here are some examples:
Identify theft or financial harm as grounds for removal
Reputation X has gotten many pages removed due to terms of service violations. This month alone, we’ve gotten more than a dozen pages removed for this reason. Google describes the information they will remove as things like bank account and credit card numbers and signature images or other information that could cause financial fraud or identity theft.
Google may remove something if the site charges for the removal (exploitive)
If a website has posted something negative about you, and they require a fee to remove the content, Google may remove it from their search engine for you.
This does not apply to business review sites. This method does not remove the post. It only removes the post from search results. Here is the form for you to use. When you use it, make sure you select “exploitive removal practices”. This is what the form should look like when it is almost completely filled out:
The sexually explicit information can often be removed from search results
Sexually explicit information posted without consent will be removed from Google’s index. To qualify, it has to meet these criteria:
- You’re nude or shown in a sexual act without consent
- You’re underage
- You intended the content to be private, and the imagery was made publicly available without your consent (e.g. “revenge porn”)
- You didn’t consent to the act, and the imagery was made publicly available without your consent
Legal reasons search engines may remove content
Google and Bing will also remove copyrighted information. This falls under the “legal removals” area. It’s considered a “DMCA” removal. Google will ask which service you’d like information removed from, for example, Google web search, Blogger, YouTube, etc.
Types of content that may be removed include:
- Sites with malware or phishing software
- Trademark violations
- Certain kinds of personal information, like social security numbers
Europeans get the “Right to Be Forgotten”; but most others don’t
Personal information will be removed from Google if a web page is in breach of European privacy laws, sometimes known as “Right to be Forgotten” laws; if your government ID number or bank account exists on the page; or if there’s a hand-written image of your signature.
For copyright infringement, learn about the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)
The DMCA protects copyright owners. Google often respects this, and they have a removal process for doing so. But we’ve found that using legal means works far more often than a simple DMCA take-down request on their site.
So, yes, lawyers do have a reason to exist (in fact, they’re some of our best clients)!
The Downside of the DMCA: Chilling Effects / Lumen
Google may send a copy of each legal notice they receive to Lumen (formerly Chilling Effects) for publication and annotation.
This means that even though you have something removed from Google’s search results, there will still be a notice at the bottom of the search results page saying something has been removed.
When a searcher clicks on the notice, they may see a notice that shows the name of the person or entity that requested to have the information taken down.
6. Push bad content down and good content up: Suppression.
If none of the above methods will work, or if you think some may not be a good idea, there are still ways to clean up your search results. In this case, take a proactive approach, and push harmful content down in search results by creating positive content to rise to the top.
How does suppression of online content work?
Secret: Suppression isn’t so much suppression as it is promotion. Suppression reduces the visibility of negative online content. Here is the logic behind the suppression of negative search results:
- Bing and Google want users to find the content displayed in their search engines valuable.
- To do this, they work to return the best possible search results.
- The best search results are those that most appropriately fit the searchers’ intent – this is called “relevance.”
- By developing much better content and promoting it properly, search engines treat the new content better than the old negative content.
- Better crafted, more relevant content that is promoted properly will often rise above negative content in search results.
Suppression, or pushing down negative search results, is the act of creating better content and promoting it to drive negatives down. Suppression is a viable alternative if information cannot be removed at the source or at the search engine level.
How to suppress negative search results?
The short answer: Give Google what it wants.
At Reputation X, we measure the strength of a given page based on an authority score – a number on a scale of one to one hundred. If the page to be buried has a high score, content must be created and promoted with a higher score. The higher the authority score, the more resources are needed to affect change. We select and create the right online content, then link it together using SEO best practices meant to stand the test of time.
That’s why our results tend to stick when the efforts of other reputable companies fail.
Click here to read about suppression services
7. Special case: Removing negative reviews
Google reviews can be removed? Yes. Google does remove reviews sometimes. To check if a review violates Google’s guidelines, check this page.
Violation of terms of service
Reviews can be removed if they violate the terms of service (TOS) for the review site. Yelp will remove certain types of comments and bad reviews, which will, in turn, increase your star rating. Check Yelp’s content guidelines to see if the review violates any of them and flag it.
Be patient when removing reviews
Sometimes it takes months to get reviews removed. Some of the most common review content that warrants removal includes:
- Threats
- Harassment
- Inappropriate content
- Spam or fake content
- Off-topic content
- Illegal content
- Sexually explicit content
- Conflicts of interest
We hope this guide to deleting things from the internet has been helpful, and we wish you the very best in attaining your goals.
Source: https://blog.reputationx.com/how-to-get-online-content-removed
This is good advice.
Unfortunately with websites like Gripeo and Dirtyscam, when you reach out to them or file a DMCA, they know they are getting to you. That, is when they start spreading the articles to even more of their sister sites, so they can demand even more money from you to take the stories down. They basically hold your reputation to ransom.
Vikram Parmar, who operates these and many other sites seems to be golden where Google are concerned. Google know who he is, what is websites are and the crimes they commit. They acknowledged this in 2021. But they ignore legitimate removal requests for these sites. But as with your own webpage, when Parmar complains about URLs that accurately describe his crimes, Google act swiftly to protect his reputation. Even though they know he is a disgusting crook.
I would tell other victims to contact law enforcement if they are being defamed and exploited by Vikram Parmar AKA Matt Hamp/Martin Horan.
Where Google is concerned, they have the power to block Parmar’s sites from their search results and with a legitimate reason (criminal activity). We know they can do this because they have blocked this site (fintelegramrevealed) from search results, even though you are just telling the truth that Google already know: Vikram Parmar and his multiple websites are all part of a criminal extortion scam!
Google didn’t block our website and domain.
The Gripeo team did a fake copy of our website, then they submit a DMCA copyright takedown, using also a fake company and fake person’s name.
The Google team check faster the request and then they shut down our website from the search engine.
We filled a counternotice request and if they will not fill a court case within 10 working days (100% they cannot do that), then Google will restore us online.
We have a lot of enemies, including those that gave us online proofs.
In a matter of days we’ll be live again 100% on the search engines.
I understand that. But when we filed a DMCA copyright takedown against Parmar, Google refused and requested a mountain of proof that we owned the copyright. We provided incontrovertible evidence of this. But Google took 6 months to take the URL down after making us provide the evidence of copyright ownership several times.
But the point I am making is that when Parmar files a totally fake DMCA copyright notice against your site, they removed your site from searches very quickly. So it seems, one rule for Gripeo/Parmar/Dirtyscam/Repze and another rule for his victims!
Your site may take 10 days to restore, and all you have done is tell the truth. But Google do not block Gripeo/Dirtyscam etc., or remove their despicable slander. Even though Google have publicly acknowledged that Parmar and his sites run an extortion scam!
So if they can block your legitimate site in no time, why don’t they block the criminal sites? The scams operated by Parmar simply would not be able to work at all IG Google blocked them from search results. It’s simple. If no one can see the slanderous material Parmar posts, he would not be able to blackmail his victims.
This was beautiful Admin. Thank you for your reflections.
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