Google Search

Report March 2025

Submitted

Executive summary


Google’s mission is to organise the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. To deliver on this mission, elevating high-quality information and enhancing information quality across our services is of utmost importance. Since Google was founded, Google’s product, policy, and content enforcement decisions have been guided by the following three principles:

1. Value openness and accessibility: Aim to provide access to an open and diverse information ecosystem, while maintaining a responsible approach to supporting information quality;

2. Respect user choice: Based on users’ intent, provide access to content that is not illegal or prohibited by Google’s policies, but set a high bar for information quality where users have not clearly expressed what they are looking for;

3. Build for everyone: Take into account the diversity of users (cultures, languages, backgrounds) and seek to address their needs appropriately.

With these principles in mind, Google has teams around the world working to combat harmful misinformation. Google has long invested in ranking systems that seek to connect people with high-quality content; in developing and enforcing rules that prohibit harmful behaviours and contents on Google services; and in innovative ways to provide context to users when they might need it most. We realise that fundamental rights are interdependent and are sometimes in tension with each other. When efforts to protect or advance one right may result in limiting another right, we identify and implement mitigation measures to address potential adverse impacts such as, protecting freedom of expression via appeals mechanisms or raising high-quality content to address lower-quality content that may appear on the platform. We comply with applicable laws by removing illegal content. We also remove content that violates our policies, and regularly evolve these policies in consultation with experts. Our work is not done, and we expect to continue improving upon these efforts in the future.

However, we are cognisant that these are complex issues, affecting all of society, which no single actor is in a position to fully tackle on their own. That is why we have welcomed the multi-stakeholder approach put forward by the EU Code of Practice on Disinformation. 

As the EU Code of Practice on Disinformation is being brought under the EU Digital Services Act (DSA) framework, Google has revised its subscription to focus on reasonable, proportionate and effective measures to mitigate systemic risks related to disinformation that are tailored to our services. Accordingly, Google has exited certain commitments that are not relevant, practicable or appropriate for its services, including all commitments under the Political Advertising and Fact-Checking chapters.

Alongside our participation in the EU Code of Practice on Disinformation, we will continue to work closely with regulators to ensure that our services appropriately comply with the DSA, in full respect of EU fundamental rights such as freedom of expression. The work of supporting a healthy information ecosystem is never finished and we remain committed to it. This is in our interest and the interest of our users.

This report includes metrics and narrative detail for Google Search, YouTube, and Google Advertising users in the European Union (EU), and covers the period from 1 July 2024 to 31 December 2024.

Updates to highlight in this report include (but are not limited to): 

  • 2024 EU Elections: In 2024, a number of elections took place around the world. In H2 2024, voters cast their ballots in the Romanian presidential election and in the second round of the French legislative election. Google was committed to supporting these democratic processes by surfacing high-quality information to voters, safeguarding its platforms from abuse and equipping campaigns with the best-in-class security tools and training. In addition, Google put in place a number of policies and other measures that have helped people navigate political content that was AI-generated, including ad disclosures, content labels on YouTube, and digital watermarking tools.

  • Supporting Researchers in Technology Related to Trust & Safety: Google has continued to demonstrate its commitment to empowering the research community by hosting workshops with researchers and providing grants to support research efforts related to Trust & Safety areas of interest. These Trust & Safety workshops aim to build relationships among scholars working in different fields, to share projects and insights across the broader Trust & Safety ecosystem. We are also committed to assisting researchers with financial support to continue their research. Google provides unrestricted grants to support research efforts across areas of interest related to Trust & Safety in technology through the Trust & Safety Research Awards. This program, in partnership with University Relations, is one of Google’s largest opportunities to partner with external researchers on priority Trust & Safety topics. Similarly, we announced the first-ever winners of the Google Academic Research Awards (GARA) program in October 2024. In this first funding cycle, the program will support 95 projects led by 143 researchers globally, and their work aligns with Google's commitment to responsible innovation.

  • Advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI): In H1 2024, we announced new AI safeguards to help protect against misuse. We introduced SynthID, a technology that adds imperceptible watermarks to AI-generated images and audio so they are easier to identify; this year, we are expanding SynthID’s capabilities to watermarking AI-generated text, audio, visual and video. YouTube also introduced a new tool in Creator Studio requiring creators to disclose to viewers when realistic content is made with altered or synthetic media, including generative AI. In addition to these new tools, we are also committed to working with the greater ecosystem to help others benefit from and improve on the advances we are making. As such, we will open-source SynthID text watermarking through our updated Responsible Generative AI Toolkit. Underpinning our advancements in AI, as a member of the Standard and Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA), we collaborate with Adobe, Microsoft, startups and many others to build and implement the newest version (2.1) of the coalition’s technical standard, Content Credentials. This version is more secure against a wider range of tampering attacks due to stricter technical requirements for validating the history of the content’s provenance.

Google has been working on AI for more than a dozen years to solve society’s biggest challenges and power Google services people use every day. The progress in large-scale AI models (including generative AI) has sparked additional discussion about the social impacts of AI and raised concerns on topics such as misinformation. Google is committed to developing technology responsibly and published AI Principles in 2018 to guide our work. Google’s robust internal governance focuses on responsibility throughout the AI development lifecycle, covering model development, application deployment, and post-launch monitoring. While we recently updated our Principles to adapt to shifts in technology, the global conversation, and the AI ecosystem, our deep commitment to responsible AI development remains unchanged. Through our philanthropic arm Google.org we have supported organisations that are using AI to tackle important societal issues. Google Search has published guidance on AI-generated content, outlining its approach to maintaining a high standard of information quality and the overall helpfulness of content on Search. To help enhance information quality across its services, Google has also announced that it will soon be integrating new innovations in watermarking, metadata, and other techniques into its latest generative models. Google has also joined other leading AI companies to jointly commit to advancing responsible practices in the development of artificial intelligence which will support efforts by the G7, the OECD, and national governments. Going forward we will continue to report and expand upon Google developed AI tools and are committed to advance bold and responsible AI, to maximise AI’s benefits and minimise its risks.


Lastly, the contents of this report should be read with the following context in mind: 

  • This report discusses the key approaches across the following Google services when it comes to addressing disinformation: Google Search, YouTube, and Google Advertising. 
  • For chapters of the Code that involve the same actions across all three services (e.g. participation in the Permanent Task-force or in development of the Transparency Centre), we respond as 'Google, on behalf of related services'.
  • This report follows the structure and template laid out by the Code’s Permanent Task-force, organised around Commitments and Chapters of the Code.
  • Unless otherwise specified, metrics provided cover activities and actions during the period from 1 July 2024 to 31 December 2024.
  • The data provided in this report is subject to a range of factors, including product changes and user settings, and so is expected to fluctuate over the time of the reporting period. As Google continues to evolve its approach, in part to better address user and regulatory needs, the data reported here could vary substantially over time. 
  • We are continuously working to improve the safety and reliability of our services. We are not always in a position to pre-announce specific launch dates, details or timelines for upcoming improvements, and therefore may reply 'no' when asked whether we can disclose future plans for Code implementation measures in the coming reporting period. This 'no' should be understood against the background context that we are constantly working to improve safety and reliability and may in fact launch relevant changes without the ability to pre-announce. 
  • This report is filed concurrently with two ‘crisis reports’ about our response to the Israel-Gaza conflict and to the war in Ukraine. Additionally, an annex on Google’s response toward the recent elections in Romania and France is included in this report. As such, while there will be references to our actions throughout this report, information specific to these events should be sought in dedicated reports. 

Google will continue to publish subsequent versions of this report biannually, focusing on the 6 months review period relevant to each filing, as requested under the Code.

Google looks forward to continuing to work together with other stakeholders in the EU to address challenges related to disinformation.

Download PDF

Commitment 17
In light of the European Commission's initiatives in the area of media literacy, including the new Digital Education Action Plan, Relevant Signatories commit to continue and strengthen their efforts in the area of media literacy and critical thinking, also with the aim to include vulnerable groups.
We signed up to the following measures of this commitment
Measure 17.1 Measure 17.2 Measure 17.3
In line with this commitment, did you deploy new implementation measures (e.g. changes to your terms of service, new tools, new policies, etc)?
Yes
If yes, list these implementation measures here
  • In May 2024, Google announced that it would open-source SynthID text watermarking through its updated Responsible Generative AI Toolkit to help others benefit from and improve on the advances Google is making. In addition, Google expanded SynthID’s capabilities to include watermarking AI-generated text in the Gemini app and web experience, as well as video in Veo, its recently announced and most capable generative video model.
  • Google Search expanded the ‘About This Image’ tool to 40 additional languages around the world, including French, German, Hindi, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish and Vietnamese.
  • In July 2024, Google announced ‘About This Image’ is now available on Circle to Search and Google Lens, giving users more ways to quickly get context on images that they see wherever they come across them.
  • In September 2024, Google announced that it would bring the latest version of the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA) technical standard, Content Credentials, to Search’s ‘About This Image’ feature. If an image contains C2PA metadata, users will be able to use the feature to see if an image was created or edited with AI tools.
Do you plan to put further implementation measures in place in the next 6 months to substantially improve the maturity of the implementation of this commitment?
Yes
If yes, which further implementation measures do you plan to put in place in the next 6 months?
No
Measure 17.1
Relevant Signatories will design and implement or continue to maintain tools to improve media literacy and critical thinking, for instance by empowering users with context on the content visible on services or with guidance on how to evaluate online content.
QRE 17.1.1
Relevant Signatories will outline the tools they develop or maintain that are relevant to this commitment and report on their deployment in each Member State.
Note: The below QRE response has been reproduced (in some instances truncated in order to meet the suggested character limit) from the previous report as there is no new information to share now.

Google Search aims to connect users with high quality information, and help users understand and evaluate that information. Google Search has deeply invested in both information quality and information literacy. Some ways in which Google Search does this include:

  • ‘About This Result’: Next to most results on Google Search, there is a menu icon that users can tap to learn more about the result or feature and where the information is coming from. With this additional context, users can make a more informed decision about the sites they want to visit and what results will be most useful for them. When available, users will see a description of the website from Wikipedia, which provides free, reliable information about tens of millions of sites on the web. If a website does not have a Wikipedia description, Google Search will show additional context that may be available, such as when Google Search first indexed the site. Users will also be able to quickly see if their connection to the site is secure based on its use of the HTTPS protocol, which encrypts all data between the website and the browser they are using, to help them stay safe as they browse the web. More information on the ‘About This Result’ feature can be found here, and here.  
    • The ‘More About This Page’ link within the ‘About This Result’ feature provides additional insights about sources and topics users find on Google Search. When a user taps the three dots on any search result, they will be able to learn more about the page. Users can: 
      • See more information about the source: Users will be able to read what a site says about itself in its own words, when that information is available.
      • Learn more about the topic: In the ‘About the topic’ section, users can find information about the same topic from other sources.
      • Find what others on the web have said about a site: Reading what others on the web have written about a site can help users better evaluate sources.
    • In December 2023, Google Search expanded this feature to 40 new languages, including Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Estonian, Finnish, Greek, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Maltese, Polish, Romanian, Slovak, Slovenian, and Swedish.
    • Additional information can be found in the Google Search blog post here.

  • ‘About This Image’: With added insights in ‘About This Image’, users will know if an image may have been generated with Google’s AI tools when they come across it in Search or Chrome. All images generated with Imagen 2 in Google’s consumer products will be marked by SynthID, a tool developed by Google DeepMind that adds a digital watermark directly into the pixels of images generated. SynthID watermarks are imperceptible to the human eye but detectable for identification. In addition, Search expanded the ‘About This Image’ tool to 40 additional languages around the world, including French, German, Hindi, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish and Vietnamese.
    • Consistent with its AI principles, Google Search also conducted extensive adversarial testing and red teaming to identify and mitigate potential harmful and problematic content. Google Search is also applying filters to avoid generating images of named people. Google Search will continue investing in new techniques to improve the safety and privacy protections of its models. 
    • More information on the ‘About This Image’ feature can be found here.

  • Content Advisory Notices: Helpful notices for users that highlight when information is scarce or when interest is travelling faster than facts. These are specifically designed to address data voids which include queries for which either content is limited or nonexistent or when a topic is rapidly evolving and reliable information is not yet available for that topic.
SLI 17.1.1
Relevant Signatories will report, at the Member State level, on metrics pertinent to assessing the effects of the tools described in the qualitative reporting element for Measure 17.1, which will include: the total count of impressions of the tool; and information on the interactions/engagement with the tool.
(1) Impression proportion estimate of content advisories for low relevance results in H2 2024 (1 July 2024 to 31 December 2024), broken down by EEA Member State;

(2) Impression proportion estimate of content advisories for rapidly changing results in H2 2024, broken down by EEA Member State;

(3) Impression proportion estimate of content advisories for potentially unreliable sets of results in H2 2024, broken down by EEA Member State;

Note metrics 1-3 are estimated proportions; metric 1 represents the number of content advisories for low relevance results out of all queries over the reporting period; metric 2 and 3 follow the same logic but are for content advisories for rapidly changing results and content advisories for potentially unreliable sets of results, respectively. 

(4) Number of times the ‘More About This Page’ feature was viewed in H2 2024, broken down by EEA Member State;

(5) Number of times the ‘Source’ section of the ‘About This Result’ panel was viewed in H2 2024, broken down by EEA Member State;

(6) Number of times the 'Your Search and this result' section of the ‘About This Result’ panel was viewed in H2 2024, broken down by EEA Member State; 

(7) Number of times the 'Personalisation' section of the ‘About This Result’ panel was viewed in H2 2024, broken down by EEA Member State.
Country Impression proportion estimate of content advisories for low relevance results (%) Impression proportion estimate of content advisories for rapidly changing results (%) Impression proportion estimate of content advisories for potentially unreliable set of results (%) Number of times the 'More About This Page' feature was viewed Number of times the 'Source' section of the ‘About This Result’ panel was viewed Number of times the 'Your Search and this result' section of the ‘About This Result’ panel was viewed Number of times the 'Personalisation' section of the ‘About This Result’ panel was viewed
Austria 0.009% 0.00007% 0.0000079% 492,336 10,161,776 10,002,348 8,443,368
Belgium 0.008% 0.00006% 0.0000062% 694,484 12,635,380 12,451,036 10,479,372
Bulgaria 0.015% 0.00004% 0.0000075% 418,008 5,520,908 5,427,300 4,564,196
Croatia 0.011% 0.00004% 0.0000067% 306,460 5,169,452 5,050,320 4,322,968
Cyprus 0.019% 0.00010% 0.0000329% 106,152 1,194,376 1,177,588 1,003,436
Czech Republic 0.009% 0.00003% 0.0000034% 658,648 9,308,096 9,185,980 7,769,180
Denmark 0.008% 0.00010% 0.0000045% 290,416 5,980,168 5,903,776 5,005,248
Estonia 0.015% 0.00011% 0.0000233% 86,100 1,521,468 1,506,608 1,285,236
Finland 0.009% 0.00012% 0.0000057% 333,476 7,408,228 7,328,700 6,237,504
France 0.007% 0.00005% 0.0000059% 4,434,580 86,918,604 85,351,180 72,299,248
Germany 0.011% 0.00010% 0.0000061% 4,744,012 96,729,900 94,959,380 80,156,384
Greece 0.017% 0.00003% 0.0000044% 753,108 11,418,624 11,171,708 9,546,464
Hungary 0.012% 0.00003% 0.0000046% 590,120 8,314,240 8,170,540 6,923,408
Ireland 0.010% 0.00010% 0.0000054% 432,868 7,267,604 7,130,680 6,061,364
Italy 0.015% 0.00004% 0.0000016% 4,336,524 79,300,560 77,454,444 66,299,316
Latvia 0.018% 0.00010% 0.0000184% 113,092 1,673,808 1,653,056 1,398,732
Lithuania 0.016% 0.00006% 0.0000127% 171,912 2,746,672 2,716,224 2,288,856
Luxembourg 0.013% 0.00015% 0.0000432% 37,252 707,288 695,948 591,364
Malta 0.015% 0.00018% 0.0000540% 49,240 703,072 691,912 594,788
Netherlands 0.009% 0.00006% 0.0000022% 1,347,040 23,309,716 22,909,616 19,352,032
Poland 0.006% 0.00002% 0.0000008% 2,240,116 47,084,536 46,397,932 39,155,200
Portugal 0.007% 0.00006% 0.0000052% 754,972 11,476,200 11,293,812 9,653,604
Romania 0.011% 0.00003% 0.0000037% 887,976 12,030,632 11,798,700 10,039,572
Slovakia 0.013% 0.00003% 0.0000104% 328,608 4,527,972 4,463,864 3,762,372
Slovenia 0.015% 0.00004% 0.0000182% 128,052 2,411,732 2,380,088 2,020,268
Spain 0.006% 0.00008% 0.0000070% 4,078,508 58,946,872 57,742,752 49,286,500
Sweden 0.007% 0.00012% 0.0000030% 614,072 13,062,580 12,902,600 10,946,140
Iceland 0.013% 0.00021% 0.0000000% 13,536 376,920 371,588 316,908
Liechtenstein 0.013% 0.00104% 0.0000000% 1,588 39,644 39,068 32,924
Norway 0.006% 0.00009% 0.0000043% 315,956 5,814,192 5,747,832 4,853,060
Total EU 0.010% 0.00006% 0.0000053% 29,428,132 527,530,464 517,918,092 439,486,120
Total EEA 0.010% 0.00006% 0.0000053% 29,759,212 533,761,220 524,076,580 444,689,012