Anyone who has ever browsed the web has faced, sooner or later, a particularly frustrating situation: you visit a site, decide to return to the search results by clicking the browser’s back arrow, and suddenly you find yourself trapped.
Instead of returning to the previous screen, the page is reloaded repeatedly, or you are redirected to unknown and unwanted addresses.
This dynamic, known in technical terms as back button hijacking or back button redirection, represents one of the most disliked practices among internet users.
To curb the growing spread of this practice, Google has decided to take stringent measures, updating its own guidelines related to search engine spam.
The aim of this move is to restore people’s full control of their browsing experience, punishing those who attempt to manipulate the browser history to force staying on certain domains.
In a recent official statement published on its blog, the Mountain View company explained in detail the reasons for the upcoming update. The document emphasizes that back button redirection is an objectively harmful behavior for the user experience.
The insertion of scripts or software techniques designed to override or hide the real browsing history will now be officially labeled as a malicious practice.
Web portal operators are therefore advised not to use any technical workaround that injects deceptive pages in the background or that fraudulently prevents immediate leaving of a web resource using the standard commands of their browser.
An interesting aspect of the new directive concerns the clear attribution of responsibilities. Google is fully aware that, in some cases, blocking backward navigation is not the result of a voluntary choice by site administrators, but stems from the superficial implementation of external advertising platforms or third-party service providers that are not transparent.
Despite these mitigating factors, the message is unequivocal: site owners are required to monitor constantly.
Those managing a web space are required to perform a thorough review to ensure that no external code compromises the browser’s normal functionality.
To allow the necessary technical adjustment, the multinational has set a fairly broad window. The new rules will officially come into effect on June 15.
After the mid-June deadline has passed, sites that continue to interfere with navigation commands will face heavy and tangible consequences. These sanctions will translate into a clear downgrade within indexing.
The direct consequence for violators will be a significant loss of visibility on the search engine and, consequently, a drastic drop in organic inbound traffic.
From the users’ perspective, however, Google’s move represents good news. As summer approaches, daily browsing should be much less irritating, ensuring greater smoothness and finally putting a brake on those forced interruptions that unnecessarily complicate the search for information.
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