TL;DR
The UK’s CMA has ordered Google to let publishers opt out of AI Overviews without losing their search ranking, a world-first requirement. Google began testing the controls immediately and plans to roll them out globally.
The CMA’s “world-first” conduct requirement gives website owners the ability to block their content from AI Overviews while remaining in conventional search, a move Google says it will roll out globally
The UK’s CMA has ordered Google to let publishers opt out of AI Overviews without losing their search ranking, a world-first requirement. Google began testing the controls immediately and plans to roll them out globally.## TL;DR
For months, publishers have faced a binary choice with Google: let AI Overviews summarise your content at the top of the search page, sending less traffic to your site, or disappear from Google entirely. As of Wednesday, that choice no longer applies in the UK. The Competition and Markets Authority has ordered Google to give publishers the ability to opt out of appearing in AI-generated search results without affecting their ranking in conventional search. The regulator called it a “world-first requirement.” Google began testing the controls with a subset of UK media sites on the same day and said it plans to roll them out globally.
Website owners will be able to use a toggle in Google Search Console to decide whether their content appears in AI Overviews and AI Mode. Sites that opt out will no longer appear in AI-generated summaries and will not receive traffic or impressions from those features. But they will continue to be indexed and ranked normally in standard search results and Google’s Discover feed.
Critically, Google is prohibited from penalising sites that opt out. A publisher’s decision to withdraw from AI search cannot influence its ranking in conventional results, according to Computing. Google must also ensure that content appearing in AI results is properly attributed with clear links to source sites.
The company will additionally have to allow publishers to opt out of having their content used for the fine-tuning of AI models, a separate but related concern that has fuelled antitrust suits and industry complaints.
The regulation arrives after a sustained decline in publisher traffic linked to AI Overviews. Studies have documented a 58% reduction in click-through rates to the websites whose content AI summaries are built on. Individual publishers have reported losses ranging from 49% at Chegg to as high as 89% for specific queries at DMG Media.
Google controls more than 90% of the UK’s online search market, according to the CMA. For nearly 30 years, publishers have relied on its search results to drive users to their sites. AI Overviews disrupted that model by answering queries directly, using publishers’ content, without sending the reader through to the source.
The opt-out gives publishers leverage to negotiate payment for the content AI uses. If a publisher withdraws from AI results, Google loses the material its summaries are built on. That creates a commercial incentive for Google to strike licensing deals rather than lose access to high-quality sources.
Google has nine months to implement all the changes, but the CMA said it wants “important parts” of the requirements in place earlier. Given that Google began testing controls on Wednesday, the practical rollout is likely to be faster than the formal deadline.
The CMA can act under its new digital markets powers, which allow it to designate firms with strategic market status and impose tailored conduct requirements without having to litigate each abuse case separately. It said it would monitor further AI integration into Google search, including features announced at Google I/O in May.
The most significant detail may be the global rollout. Google said the controls being tested in the UK will extend to other markets, meaning a decision by a British regulator could reset the terms on which AI summarises the open web everywhere. It also arrives as Google pushes deeper into always-on AI search agents that operate continuously on users’ behalf.
CMA chief executive Sarah Cardell said the requirement would result in “fair treatment, greater transparency and meaningful choice for businesses and consumers.” Theo Bamber, chief executive of the News Media Association, called it a “significant step” but warned that “only strong and consistent political support” would lead to “a system of fair and reasonable payment for publisher content.”
The opt-out is a tool, not a solution. Whether publishers actually use it, and whether it translates into licensing revenue rather than simply less visibility, will determine whether this world-first requirement becomes a model or a footnote.
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