Google has committed to letting publishers opt out of AI Overviews and other generative AI search features. This is in response to the UK Competition and Markets Authority's consultation on its search market practices, without providing an implementation date for the change.

The CMA, which granted itself Strategic Market Status over Google Search in 2025, proposed a package of measures requiring Google to give publishers greater control over how their content appears in AI-generated results. Google accepted the opt-out commitment in principle. No timeline was specified.

What the opt-out commitment covers

Under the CMA's proposed terms, publishers would be able to remove their content from AI Overviews and comparable generative AI features in Google Search. The News Media Association, which requested a three-month implementation window, received a counter-proposal from Google of six months, with no binding timeline agreed.

Two protections are central to the CMA's proposal. Google must not introduce ranking signals that penalise publishers who opt out, meaning a site that removes itself from AI Overviews should not see a decline in its organic search position. Publishers who opt out must also not have their content "presented or displayed differently" in standard results.

Those two provisions are the operative protections. Without them, an opt-out mechanism creates a dilemma: publishers can remove their content from AI summaries, but risk losing their ranking position as a consequence. The CMA's draft language is designed to close that gap.

What the data shows

The Publishers Association submitted data showing a 19% decline in click-through rates to academic reference services, attributed to Google's AI features drawing user attention away from linked results. The pattern reflects a broader concern across news and specialist publishers: AI Overviews answer queries directly in the search result, reducing the need to visit the underlying source.

For publishers and SEO teams, the core commercial question is whether the visibility benefit of appearing in AI summaries offsets the traffic cost. A workable opt-out, with guaranteed non-retaliation, would allow publishers to make that calculation and act on it without risking their organic position.

The regulatory context

The CMA's Strategic Market Status regime gives it authority to impose binding conditions on Google's UK search practices. The EU's Digital Markets Act has already required structural concessions from Google in Europe. If the CMA secures a penalty-free opt-out, it becomes a tested regulatory template for publisher lobbying in other jurisdictions.

Google also proposed a permanent central device setting for choosing a default search engine, replacing the annual choice screens provided in some markets. The company separately warned that transparency proposals requiring disclosure of ranking factors could expose its systems to "manipulation and abuse."

Microsoft's Bing runs comparable AI-generated search features but faces no equivalent regulatory scrutiny in the UK. The asymmetric pressure on Google reflects its dominant market position rather than a technology-specific concern, and Microsoft faces no equivalent timeline to provide publishers with similar controls.

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