le ranks AI-generated article ‘Star Wars,’ lacking E-E.A.T.

Google Search finds ways to place content that should not be on the first page of results, despite constant reminders about creating helpful content, and the importance E-E-A.T (expertise experience authority and trustworthiness).

You can find a chronological list of Star Wars movies and TV shows on Gizmodo, which was published yesterday (note that it has been updated with several corrections today).

The author is GizmodoBot

Page one for [Star Wars movies]. The article was ranked well despite multiple errors.

It is now in Position 5 but earlier that day it was in Position 3 above the Rotten Tomatoes Page.

The key here may have been the freshness. Gizmodo has a strong name and produces a lot of content related to this topic.

This article. This article is located on the Gizmodo technology blog’s io9 section, which publishes articles about science fiction and fantasy films, TV, comics, books.

The editor’s reply. We all know that AI-generated content doesn’t necessarily mean it is bad. This was so bad that James Whitebrook’s deputy editor ranted about on Twitter.

The full text of his statement is:

This is the correction. Our editorial team has updated the article with a note added at the end.

You can view the original version via the Wayback machine if you are curious.

Why we care. You can absolutely publish AI-generated material. Some of the content may even rank on page 1. If the content is incorrect, and has not been reviewed by a subject matter expert or editor, it could cause long-term damage for your brand.

It’s not the first nor is it the last. In an effort to cut costs, many brands are now turning to AI generated content. The end product is not always good, even though it’s cheaper and faster to produce.

The post Google ranks AI generated ‘Star Wars” article lacking E.E.A.T first appeared on Search Engine Land.

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