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Perhaps in response to suggestions that its Search functions have been degraded or been usurped by AI summaries that not everybody wants, Google will now let you select news sources to narrow things down.

The company said in a blog post this week that it’s launching Preferred Sources in the US and India over the next few days, along with a plus icon to the right of Top Stories in searches. Clicking on that plus symbol allows you to add blogs or news outlets. There doesn’t appear to be a limit on how many sources you can add.

“Once you select your sources, they will appear more frequently in Top Stories or in a dedicated ‘From your sources’ section on the search results page. You’ll still see content from other sites, and can manage your selections at any time,” Google said.

The new feature is the result of a Labs experiment. Google says that in that version, half of its users added four or more sources. Google offered advice to website publishers and owners on how to direct readers to add their site.

Speaking of which, we’d be remiss if we didn’t suggest adding CNET to your preferred Google search sources. We hear they do great work.

What it means for news sites and their readers

News organizations and other information sites have shifted before to cater to Google’s search algorithm as well as those on other platforms including Facebook and Instagram. Publishers executed a pivot to video in the 2010s, and in recent years produced more bite-sized content suitable for sharing on platforms such as TikTok.

Here’s how you get to select your news sources.

Google

The addition of news preferences might be a double-edged sword, giving you more control over search results while further shutting out some legitimate news publishers as new echo chambers get built. 

“It’s almost like a tone-deaf move by Google in my point of view, because news organizations are already concerned about losing traffic to the AI overviews,” said Alex Mahadevan, director of MediaWise at Poynter, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media literacy program. “Now they have to figure out how to get people to pick their source in the source preferences.”

For bigger news publishers who have a loyal audience, Preferred Sources might prove that audience engagement efforts can pay off. But Mahadevan says it will depend on how willing people are to effectively subscribe to and curate their own news sources list. 

“I question how many people will actually use it,” he said.

People may see their own beliefs reinforced, not challenged

Publishers who haven’t cultivated engaged, loyal followers and don’t have the means to steer their audiences might suffer, Mahadevan says.

“The thing that does concern me about this is you know for the organizations that may have not done that, it’s just going to further erode the amount of Google traffic they get,” Mahadevan said. “If way more people want news from Fox News and are choosing Fox News among their source preferences, then that’s going to be crowding out other news sites that might need that traffic.”

As an experiment, Mahadevan says he set Breitbart News Network as a source using the Google Search feature, saying he chose the far-right news source because it has been known to share misinformation.

“I started Googling about tariffs and the first thing I see is Breitbart,” he said. “So this concerns me also from a media literacy standpoint because I think it might further push people into echo chambers,” where they only see beliefs that correspond with those they already hold.

“It just seems like a way for people to narrow down their news diet even more via Google Search,” Mahadevan said.

If SEO, the way that websites have for decades have drawn Google traffic by generating good, relevant content, is effectively out the window, what does that mean for the future of publishing and media? 

“Is there a strong enough media literacy base for people to make sure they’re choosing good legitimate news outlets and a varied variety of news sources?” Mahadevan asked. “I don’t know if we’re quite there yet.”



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