Google removes Search Engine Land article after false DMCA claim
Google removed a Search Engine Land article (Report: Clickout Media turned news sites into AI gambling hubs, published March 26) from its search results after a copyright complaint (that appears, to us, to be entirely false). Meanwhile, a similar DMCA filing led to the takedown of the original Press Gazette investigation.
What happened. A DMCA notice filed March 27 claimed Search Engine Land copied content “word for word” and used proprietary images.
- The complaint led Google to begin removing the article from search results globally.
- The notice identified the complainant as “US Webspam,” with no clear public attribution.
The context. The removed article reported that Clickout Media allegedly used expired or acquired domains to publish AI-generated gambling content.
- Press Gazette, which broke the story on March 25, said its own investigation was also removed from Google after a nearly identical complaint.
- That complaint falsely alleged infringement of a 2024 Verge article, despite no direct duplication.
- You can read their follow-up here: Press Gazette exposé of parasite SEO firm removed from Google results.
The claim details. Here’s the message we received via Google Search Console on March 27:
Description of claim: The infringing news website has blatantly and willfully violated copyright law by copying our entire content word for word, including all images, which are solely owned by our company. This includes the complete replication of our original written material, as published on our official website, along with the proprietary visuals accompanying it. Despite multiple good-faith efforts to resolve this matter amicably, the infringing party (hereinafter referred to as “Infringer”) continues to unlawfully publish and distribute our copyrighted content without permission. This is a direct and flagrant breach of our rights and a clear violation of Google’s copyright policies. We hereby demand the immediate removal of this infringing material from Google search results to protect our intellectual property.
You can read the DMCA complaint here.
What doesn’t add up. The Search Engine Land article contains no images, contradicting the complaint. Also:
- A search of its text shows no evidence of copied content.
- The notice claims “multiple good-faith efforts” to resolve the issue, but no outreach was received before filing.
- The complaint was submitted one day after publication.
What Google says. Google’s standard policy is to remove content upon receiving a valid copyright complaint, with an option for publishers to file a counter notice. The company has not commented on this specific case.
Why we care. This shows how DMCA takedowns can be weaponized to suppress reporting, including coverage of search spam and site reputation abuse. Legitimate content can be temporarily removed from search results due to unverified claims, and the resolution can take weeks or longer.
What’s next. We’ll watch whether this article is DMCA’d and removed, along with the Press Gazette’s, and anyone else covering the story.
Reactions. Here’s some reaction from X:
theholycoins isn’t owned by clickout (it’s one of the sites that would actually do negative reporting into their scams, so they probably picked one of those posts and said they were them/the original author of your dmca’d piece)
—
the rabbit hole on clickout goes a lot deeper than…(@undercover) March 30, 2026
I'm surprised this was approved by Google… I've seen them come back with rejected DMCA notices when it was clear the site was infringing copyright. This is a BS DMCA takedown that doesn't even make sense. Very interesting case… I have a feeling the article will surface again… https://t.co/Zi8hUV8g14
— Glenn Gabe (@glenngabe) March 29, 2026
— Gagan Ghotra (@gaganghotra_) March 29, 2026
A totally irrelevant site has DMCAed Search Engine Land's reporting page about ClickOut Media spamming Google's search results!
Weird enough DMCA requested was accepted by Google and now this URL https://t.co/DV8TR1NRLk from Search Engine Land isn't showing up in search… pic.twitter.com/dGbJ04KbQG
ICYMI:
— Afik Rechler (@kifakrec) March 29, 2026
Last week @pressgazette published an investigative report about a media company that acquires online publishers and exploits their domain authority for SEO shenanigans.
This is the same company that acquired a portion of @Cointelegraph to host casino & gambling content,… pic.twitter.com/duFkS7MBiP
(@undercover)