No, it’s a new news_keywords metatag that Google just announced today
and only works for news publishers that are sources in Google News. The
new metatag essentially gives publishers some freedom to be more
creative in their headlines and article copy, and not have to worry
about cramming keywords in everything they publish. Here’s a quick
explanation from Google News Product Manager Rudy Galfi:
The goal is simple: empower news writers to express their stories freely while helping Google News to properly understand and classify that content so that it’s discoverable by our wide audience of users.
Similar in spirit to the plain keywords metatag, the news_keywords metatag lets publishers specify a collection of terms that apply to a news article. These words don’t need to appear anywhere within the headline or body text.
Google has already published a help page showing how to implement the news_keywords meta tag, which is like this:
meta name=”news_keywords” content=”World Cup, Brazil 2014, Spain vs Netherlands”
Publishers
are limited to 10 news keywords and they have to use commas to separate
each one. (Talk about back to the future, right?)
Google
also warns that using the news_keywords meta tag isn’t a quick path to
ranking better in Google News. It’s only one signal, and “high-quality
reporting and interesting news content remain the strongest ways to put
your newsroom’s work in front of Google News users.”
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