The search giant also plans to give publishers more information about the ways their content shows up in AI Overviews and AI Mode.

Anna GragertSenior Editor, Health and Home

Anna Gragert (she/her/hers) was previously the lifestyle editor at HelloGiggles, the deputy editor at So Yummy and the senior lifestyle editor at Hunker. Over the past 12 years, Anna has also written for the LA Times, Elle, Bust Magazine, Dazed, Apartment Therapy, Well+Good and more. At CNET, she's a senior editor on the Healthy Home team, and her coverage includes health, wellness tech, meal kits and home and kitchen tech with a focus on the technology that aims to help us live our healthiest, happiest lives.

ExpertiseHealth and wellness tech, meal kits, home and kitchen tech, food, mental health

Google's new control aims to give website owners more choice in whether their content appears in its AI Search.

Koshiro K/Shutterstock

Google is testing a new option that lets website owners manage how their content and links appear in the company's generative AI Search features, the company announced in a Keyword blog post early Wednesday morning.

The test offers publishers more insight and control over how they show up in AI-powered search results, as Google appears to be leaning more and more toward chatbot-like interfaces as opposed to the traditional "10 blue links" results pages. At its I/O developer conference in May, the company showed off changes like an expanded AI Mode and a search box that adjusts to fit the context of your query.

This general trend toward AI-powered search has caused consternation among publishers, in part out of fear that readers will stay on the search page instead of venturing to the websites themselves, despite the fact that those publishers often provide the information relayed by the AI search tool. Publishers also have limited visibility into how their content appears in AI Overviews or AI Mode results.

In the test launching this week with a small group of publishers in the UK, the website owners will be able to decide whether their site will be used for and appear in AI Search.

"Sites that opt out will not receive traffic or impressions from our generative AI features," said Mrinalini Loew, general manager of Google Search Ecosystem, in the blog post. The new control also won't be used to determine how websites rank in Google search results outside of its generative AI Search.

An example of an AI Overview when asking, "What is Gemini?"

Google/CNET screenshot

In Google Search Console, website owners can also gain additional insights into how their pages appear in AI Search. This includes information on which pages show up in AI responses across different countries, as well as impression metrics.

"We're also actively listening to feedback from publishers and creators, and engaging with regulators like the UK's Competition and Markets Authority to ensure website owners have the right tools as user preferences evolve," Loew wrote.

Google said it's starting with a group of UK publishers in a test before the feature rolls out globally.

"We don't have specific details to share about the sites included," a Google spokesperson told CNET. They added that this is consistent with the company's approach for complex launches, where it roll outs features gradually by starting with a subset of users or websites to allow for thorough testing before expanding.

ANNA GRAGERT

Senior Editor, Health and Home

Anna Gragert (she/her/hers) was previously the lifestyle editor at HelloGiggles, the deputy editor at So Yummy and the senior lifestyle editor at Hunker. Over the past 12 years, Anna has also written for the LA Times, Elle, Bust Magazine, Dazed, Apartment Therapy, Well+Good and more. At CNET, she's a senior editor on the Healthy Home team, and her coverage includes health, wellness tech, meal kits and home and kitchen tech with a focus on the technology that aims to help us live our healthiest, happiest lives.See full bio