Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
Jeffrey Goldberg got the push notification of all push notifications — and a hell of a story
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
Feb. 22, 2024, 3:59 p.m.

Google tests removing the News tab from search results

The News filter disappearing from Google search results for some users this week won’t help publishers sleep any easier.

News publishers are worried — with good reason — about changes coming to Google Search. AI-generated content replacing links on some of the most valuable space on the internet, in particular, has left media types with a lot of questions, starting with “is this going to be a traffic-destroying nightmare?”

The News filter disappearing from Google search results for some users this week won’t help publishers sleep any easier.

Google confirmed some users were not seeing the News filter as part of ongoing testing. “We’re testing different ways to show filters on Search and as a result, a small subset of users were temporarily unable to access some of them,” a Google spokesperson said in an email.

On Friday, Google clarified that the tests that removed the News filter for some users were finished. “The News filter is available to users now and we do not have plans to remove it,” a Google spokesperson confirmed.

I use the News tab frequently — several times a day, every day — and I noticed its disappearance on Wednesday. The featured filters — Images, Videos, Maps, Flights, Shopping, Perspectives, etc. — change and reorder depending on the search term, but this was different. I wasn’t seeing the News tab as an option for search after search, even if I went looking in the “All filters” drop-down menu. I tried with “Julian Assange,” “public subsidies for sports stadiums,” and “Reckon layoffs.” None showed the News filter as an option.

The next day, on a different computer, my News filter was (blessedly) back. But a few other users confirmed I was not alone.

This article was updated Friday, Feb. 23 with additional information from Google.

Sarah Scire is deputy editor of Nieman Lab. You can reach her via email (sarah_scire@harvard.edu), Twitter, Bluesky, or Signal (scire.99).
POSTED     Feb. 22, 2024, 3:59 p.m.
Show tags
 
Join the 60,000 who get the freshest future-of-journalism news in our daily email.
Jeffrey Goldberg got the push notification of all push notifications — and a hell of a story
His inclusion on a high-level Signal chat about American war plans highlights how the Trump administration is operating — and how much of a threat it is to a free press.
There’s another reason the L.A. Times’ AI-generated opinion ratings are bad (this one doesn’t involve the Klan)
At a time of increasing polarization and rigid ideologies, the L.A. Times has decided it wants to make its opinion pieces less persuasive to readers by increasing the cost of changing your mind.
The NBA’s next big insider may be an outsider
While insiders typically work for established media companies like ESPN, Jake Fischer operates out of his Brooklyn apartment and publishes scoops behind a paywall on Substack. It’s not even his own Substack.