Google is more than happy to let people use Google Translate, but if they dare use automatically translated content on their website the search giant will lay down penalties that will lower their websites’ rankings. In fact, in September 2015, Google’s head of search spam Matt Cutts explained in a video that Google will take action on automatically generated pages that provide no value.
Among examples of such content that is outlined in Google’s violation guidelines document “Automatically Generated Content:”
- Text translated by an automated tool without human review or curation before publishing
- Text generated through automated processes, such as Markov chains
- Text generated using automated synonymizing or obfuscation techniques
- Text generated from scraping Atom/RSS feeds or search results
- Stitching or combining content from different web pages without adding sufficient value
What automatically generated content Google does not catch in its search algorithm, the company encourages people to report as spam.
