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    You are at:Home»Africa Intelligence»Move to allow UK to block Google’s AI overview on websites
    Africa Intelligence

    Move to allow UK to block Google’s AI overview on websites

    Xsum NewsBy Xsum NewsJanuary 29, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read8 Views
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    The UK has signaled it will no longer trust Google to do everything when it comes to online search and the burgeoning world of generative AI. A new proposal from the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) aims to give publishers, especially newsrooms, the power to say no to Google’s AI Overviews scraping and summarizing their work.

    And in a global environment where publishers from Johannesburg to London are fighting for digital survival, this could be a turning point.

    Why British publishers are fed up

    As in South Africa, publishers in the UK have long argued that tech giants profit from journalism without paying for it. Google’s AI summaries feature takes user queries and responds with AI-generated summaries, often built from publisher content. The problem is simple. The summary appears at the top of the page and fewer people click through to the original article.

    Less traffic means less advertising revenue. This is a huge blow to local newsrooms, which are already battling shrinking budgets.

    The News Media Association didn’t mince words. The company’s chief executive said Google was “extracting valuable data without compensation” and gaining an unfair advantage in the AI ​​race. This is a sentiment echoed in South Africa and across the global media world, where editors are increasingly worried that AI summarization will disrupt already fragile viewership numbers.

    What CMA wants to change

    Under the proposals, which are currently open for public comment until February 25, the CMA wants to introduce a clear and enforceable opt-out system.

    Publishers should be able to block Google from using their content in AI overviews.

    It should also be allowed to prevent content from training Google’s AI models.

    Google needs to specify exactly how it attributes the sources of AI-generated answers.

    This is part of a broader shift towards increased surveillance. The CMA has already classified Google as having a “strategic market position”, meaning it has significant influence over what the public sees online. In the UK, Google controls over 90% of all search queries and shapes everything from daily news consumption to where businesses advertise.

    Google is trying to maintain a middle ground

    The tech giant is clearly reading the mood in the room. A Google executive said the company is already working on new controls that would allow sites to opt out of AI features. Still, Google added a warning that too many restrictions can hurt the user experience.

    The company also hinted at concerns about a patchwork search landscape where some websites show up in the AI ​​overview while others don’t. Google says the goal is balance, not chaos.

    What this means for readers and the future of search

    For users, especially those who prefer trusted sources of information in an age of misinformation, the CMA claims the new rules will help rebuild trust. It also requires Google to make it easier for people to switch their default search engine and ensure rankings are fair and transparent.

    Britain’s approach mirrors the European Union’s Digital Markets Act, which is already forcing tech giants to adjust their systems. If the UK goes ahead with this, it could spark similar moves in other countries grappling with the rapid growth of AI.

    And the ripple effects will reach South Africa as well. Global publishers, including local retailers, have long wanted stronger protections against AI scraping. Once major markets begin to draw the line, it creates a precedent for other markets to follow.

    online reaction

    Reaction on social media in the UK was a mix of relief and skepticism.

    Journalists praised what they called “a long-awaited fix.”

    Independent bloggers were concerned that Google would simply reduce the visibility of sites that opted out.

    Ordinary users debated whether to trust AI summaries at all.

    Regarding X, one editor in London wrote: “If AI wants us to report on it, we have to pay for it. Stop it completely.” Meanwhile, technology commentators have warned that regulations need to be tightened to keep pace with the rapid development of AI.

    A turning point in the fight for media survival

    Google has over 7,000 employees in the UK and its search platform supports over 200,000 UK businesses. Regulation does not come without tension.

    However, the CMA maintains that giving publishers more bargaining power is essential to maintaining a healthy and diverse media ecosystem. In an industry where every click counts, the ability to refuse AI extraction can be the difference between survival and decline.

    If passed, the proposal would not only reshape Google’s search capabilities in the UK. It could reshape the entire global conversation about who controls online information and who is paid to create that information.

    {Source:EWN}

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