Introduction to This Week’s SEO Updates
This week’s SEO updates are all about access and how it affects your online presence. From Google’s new Personal Intelligence feature to the importance of choosing the right domain, we’ll break down what you need to know.
Google Connects Gmail and Photos to AI Mode
Google has launched Personal Intelligence, a feature that connects Gmail and Google Photos to AI Mode in Search. This means that users who opt-in will get personalized responses based on their own data. The feature is currently available to Google AI Pro and AI Ultra subscribers in the US.
What This Means for You
This update could change the way users interact with search. With access to personal data, users may not need to type as much to get relevant results. For example, if a user is planning a trip, Google can suggest hotels and activities based on their past emails and photos. This could lead to shorter, more ambiguous queries, making it harder to target long-tail searches.
Expert Insights
Robby Stein, VP of Product at Google Search, sees this as a more personal search experience driven by opt-in data connections. However, others are concerned about trust and privacy tradeoffs. Michele Curtis, a content marketing specialist, emphasizes that personalization only works when trust comes first.
AI Training Bots Lose Access While Search Bots Expand
A recent study by Hostinger found that AI crawlers are following two different paths. Training bots are losing access as more sites block them, while search and assistant bots are expanding their reach. This distinction matters because training bots collect data to build models, while search bots retrieve content in real-time.
Key Findings
The study analyzed 66 billion bot requests across over 5 million websites and found that:
- GPTBot, which collects training data, fell from 84% to 12% coverage over the measurement period.
- OAI-SearchBot, which powers ChatGPT search, reached an average coverage of 55.67% without the same decline.
- Googlebot maintained 72% coverage, while Apple’s bot reached 24.33%.
What This Means for SEO
As a best practice, check your server logs to see what’s hitting your site and make blocking decisions based on your goals. Aleyda Solís recommends separating "training" from "search and retrieval" in your robots decisions, blocking GPTBot while allowing OAI-SearchBot.
Mueller: Free Subdomain Hosting Makes SEO Harder
Google’s John Mueller warned that free subdomain hosting services create SEO challenges even when publishers do everything else right. The advice came in response to a Reddit post from a publisher whose site shows up in Google but doesn’t appear in normal search results.
The Problem with Free Subdomains
Mueller explained that free subdomain services attract spam and low-effort content, making it harder for search engines to assess individual site quality. He recommended building direct traffic through promotion and community engagement rather than expecting search visibility first.
Expert Advice
Most SEO professionals agree that choosing the right domain is crucial for visibility. Fernando Paez V, a digital marketing specialist, calls out free subdomain hosting as a visibility issue tied to spam-heavy environments.
Theme of the Week: Access is the New Advantage
This week’s stories share a common element: access shapes outcomes before any optimization happens. Whether it’s access to personal data, websites via bots, or fair evaluation by choosing the right domain, it’s clear that visibility depends on what you allow in and where you build.
Conclusion
In conclusion, this week’s SEO updates highlight the importance of access in shaping online visibility. From Google’s Personal Intelligence feature to the distinction between training and search bots, it’s clear that access decisions shape results more than incremental optimization gains. By reviewing your crawler permissions and domain choices, you can stay ahead of the game and improve your online presence.

