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16th April, 2025

Google Just Snapped GeeksForGeeks (GFG) Out Of Their Existence


GeeksForGeeks (GFG) went from 71 million monthly visitors to being practically invisible on Google overnight. Why? Because they decided coding tutorials weren't profitable enough and pivoted to birthday wishes, pirated movie downloads and other type of weird off-topic thin blogs/articles. I break down this spectacular SEO self-destruction and what we can learn from it.

Introduction

GeeksForGeeks, the Indian EdTech giant that went from a coding god to... well, let's just say their Google Search visibility is currently in the dumpster. Remember when you'd Google any coding problem and GeeksForGeeks would inevitably pop up in the top results? Yeah, those days are officially over. As a developer who practically lived on GeeksForGeeks during my early college coding days, watching their fall from grace has been like witnessing your fav childhood YouTube get caught selling fake crypto coins to their audience. Embarrassing, confusing, and honestly a little hilarious. Let me paint you a picture: GeeksForGeeks went from 71+ MILLION monthly visitors to a pathetic 17.5M after Google's March 2025 core update. That's not a just traffic dip but that's online embarrasement for your website's image.

What Actually Happened?

I first noticed something was off when I searched for a sorting algorithm last week and GeeksForGeeks was nowhere to be found. At first, I thought my Google Chrome app was broken (classic move blame the app). But nope! Google had straight-up Thanos-snapped one of the biggest programming resources off its search index.

When you visit GeeksForGeeks.org now, you're greeted with this hilariously understated notice:

⚠️ Important Notice: Due to temporary issues with Google search, our site may not appear in results.
Please use the search below to find your desired articles. ~ GeeksForGeeks

"Temporary issues"? I don't think so. This is a fascinating way to describe "we royally screwed up and Google caught us." It's like calling a nuclear meltdown a "slight temperature increase."

The Foot Guns

So what exactly did GeeksForGeeks do to earn Google's wrath? Buckle up, because this is where it gets good. Someone at GeeksForGeeks had the brilliant idea to expand beyond programming tutorials and into... checks notes... "Best Free Movie Download Sites for 2024", "100+ Happy Birthday Wishes: Sweet Quotes & Message Ideas.", Happy Friendship Day Wishes, Quotes and Messages 2024, etc. No, I'm not joking. A site known for teaching people how to implement red-black trees and dynamic programming decided that what their audience REALLY wanted? They wanted: piracy guides and generic birthday messages. These pages have since been deleted, but the internet never forgets. Thanks to the Wayback Machine, we can still marvel at these Content Marketing™ masterpieces that likely contributed to their downfall.

Best Free Movie Download Sites for 2024 - GeeksForGeeks

THEN:

NOW:

100+ Happy Birthday Wishes: Sweet Quotes & Message ideas - GeeksForGeeks

THEN:

NOW:

Happy Friendship Day Wishes, Quotes and Messages 2024 - GeeksForGeeks

THEN:

NOW:

Imagine being the content writer tasked with implementing these blogs/articles: Project Manager: Hey, I need you to create a new section on our site. Content Writer: Is it for the new DSA visualization tool? Project Manager: No, we need birthday wishes. Like, a lot of them. With emojis. Content Writer: existential crisis intensifies

The Backlink Incident: GFG's Secret Side Hustle

Here's where it gets even juicier: I strongly suspect GeeksForGeeks was running a paid backlink operation on the side. Think of it as a digital protection racket for desperate content creators. It works like this: GeeksForGeeks has massive domain authority from years of legitimate programming content. Authors and marketers who can't rank their own garbage content would pay GeeksForGeeks to host their articles and link back to their sites. The library metaphor is spot on - imagine a respected university library secretly accepting cash to place sketchy self-published books alongside academic textbooks. The Movie Download Guides, Birthday Wishes and Happy Friendship Day Wishes I found were just the tip of the iceberg. They're like finding two cockroaches in your kitchen but you know damn well there are hundreds more hiding in the walls. Google doesn't nuke a site with 70+ million monthly visitors for just two off-topic blogs/articles. I'd bet my mechanical keyboard collection that if we had access to their complete sitemap history, we'd find hundreds of these backlink-farming articles spanning every imaginable high-volume search category:

  • Top 10 Ways to Make Money From Home
  • Best Weight Loss Pills That Actually Work
  • How to Get Your Ex Back in 7 Days
  • Celebrity Net Worth: Who's the Richest in 2024?

These aren't wild guesses - these are the exact types of articles that desperate marketers pay good money to place on high-authority domains. And GeeksForGeeks, apparently forgetting they were supposed to be a PROGRAMMING resource, was more than happy to cash those checks.

Why Google Banned GeeksForGeeks (GFG)

This is a classic example of what SEO experts call "going completely off the Rails to get a Ruby." Let me break down why Google probably banned them:

  1. Domain Authority Abuse: GeeksForGeeks built authority in programming, then tried to leverage that authority to rank for completely unrelated topics. This is like your respected calculus professor suddenly trying to sell you cryptocurrency.
  2. Thin Content: These off-topic articles were low-quality garbage with minimal value and that's exactly what Google's been trying to purge from search results.
  3. Backlink Scheme: If my suspicions are correct, Google detected an unnatural pattern of backlinks and content that had nothing to do with programming. Google HATES paid backlink schemes with the passion of a thousand suns.
  4. Manual Action: Given the severity and speed of the drop, it's likely Google's human reviewers got involved and issued a manual penalty. When actual humans review your content and go "WTF is this?", you're in big trouble.
  5. Parasite SEO: Someone at GeeksForGeeks might have been running their own little side hustle, using the site's authority to rank content for their own benefit or for paying clients.

The fact that GeeksForGeeks is frantically cleaning up their sitemaps now tells you everything you need to know. They're like teenagers hurriedly hiding beer bottles before their parents get home but except they already got caught and grounded for life.

An Equivalent of "Hold My Beer"

The most mind-boggling aspect is that someone at GeeksForGeeks a TECH company staffed with presumably intelligent people and thought they could pull a fast one on GOOGLE. You know, the company whose entire business model revolves around detecting exactly this kind of bullshit. This is an equivalent of trying to outrun a Tesla in a golf cart while shouting "Watch this MF!"

Why This Matters to Every Developer and Content Creator

"But I don't run a big website," you might be thinking. "Why should I care about some tech education platform's downfall?" Because the internet is increasingly becoming a place where you can't publish fake and off-topic blogs/articles till you make it. Google's algorithms are getting smarter about detecting when sites stray from their lane:

  1. Stick to what you know: GeeksForGeeks would still be thriving if they had simply doubled down on what made them successful with high-quality programming content.
  2. Quality over quantity: Adding thousands of garbage pages dilutes your value and sends warning signals to search engines.
  3. Think long-term: Short-term SEO tricks inevitably lead to long-term consequences.
  4. Money isn't always worth it: The short-term revenue from selling backlinks or hosting garbage content can't possibly offset the loss of 50+ million monthly visitors.

The Road to Redemption

Can GeeksForGeeks recover? Maybe. They're already cleaning house by removing the off-topic thin content and probably firing whoever greenlit "10 Best Sites to Download Free Movies Illegally" on a programming education website. But trust is hard to rebuild. Google doesn't easily forgive sites that deliberately try to game the system, and developers have plenty of alternatives for coding resources. They'll need to purge ALL the off-topic content, not just the obvious offenders. And they'll need to convince Google that they've genuinely reformed their ways. In SEO terms, that's like convincing your girl you've changed after she caught you drinking alcholol with your best friend.

The Lesson For All of Us

As someone who builds websites and Brahmbhatt content, I'm taking this spectacular self-destruction as a reminder that there are no sustainable shortcuts. GeeksForGeeks forgot who they were and what made them valuable in the first place. They got greedy, tried to be everything to everyone, and ended up being nothing to Google. As the ancient proverb says: JACK OF ALL TRADES, MASTER OF NONE, REMOVED FROM GOOGLE SEARCH, NOW YOUR BUSINESS IS DONE. Pour one out for GeeksForGeeks. And maybe check if StackOverflow has any birthday message templates, just in case.

Abbreviations

Abbreviations Full Form
GFG GeeksForGeeks
SEO Search Engine Optimization
PM Project Manager
CW Content Writer
DSA Data Structures and Algorithms

The logos used in this article are registered trademarks of their respective owners. They are included for informational purposes only, and no affiliation or endorsement is implied.

  • The GeeksForGeeks logo is a registered trademark of GeeksForGeeks Company.
  • The Google logo is a registered trademark of Google LLC.

All trademarks, logos, and brand names mentioned in this article belong to their respective owners.


Google Just Snapped GeeksForGeeks (GFG) Out Of Their Existence by Kush Brahmbhatt is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

Notes:
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(ii) Click on to open and close Sharing Options.

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