New rule, real deadline
The biggest SEO story today is Google formally targeting "back button hijacking" as spam, with enforcement set for June 15, 2026. This is the tactic where a site blocks the browser back button and pushes people to extra pages, ads, or fake navigation. Google says pages doing this can face manual actions or automated ranking demotions. Search Engine Roundtable and Search Engine Land are aligned here, and the move appears to come straight from Google policy changes rather than forum rumor.
For normal site owners, the takeaway is simple: if your developer, ad script, or pop-up tool messes with browser navigation, fix it now. This is not an SEO trick anymore. It is a liability.
Google is busy, but not in core update mode
There is no active Google algorithm update rolling out today. The March 2026 core update finished on April 8, so the turbulence many sites are still feeling is more likely aftershocks, testing, or smaller unconfirmed shifts, not a fresh confirmed core update. Search Engine Land and Search Engine Journal both point to the April 8 completion date.
That fits the volatility picture. Rankings ran hot through mid-March, stayed elevated for weeks, cooled to 4.7/10 on April 13, then ticked back up to a partial 5.1/10 today. That is not storm-level chaos, but it is not calm either. In plain English: Google is still moving things around, just without a named update attached.
Other signals site owners should not ignore
Google also updated Search Central documentation today, including a cleanup of its How Search Works guidance and changes in documentation updates around structured data, while coverage from Search Engine Roundtable highlighted fresh wording changes in Google Business Profile identity edits and a coming Ads and Analytics consent-control simplification starting June 15. Those are not headline-grabbing ranking changes, but they matter operationally for local businesses and anyone relying on tracking.
Bottom Line
- Audit your site for back-button interference before June 15.
- Do not assume every ranking wobble means a new core update.
- Check tracking and consent setups, especially if you use Google Ads and Analytics together.