In late 2025 and early 2026, the scale of these attacks reached new heights. In one instance, a hijacked subdomain on a major university site jumped from zero to . Google’s Response
Google search results are currently facing an unprecedented level of "hijacking" through sophisticated SEO tactics and malicious scams. While Google frequently updates its algorithms to combat these issues, 2026 has seen a surge in aggressive techniques that manipulate authority and trust. What is Search Hijacking?
Algorithmic enforcement now targets those who lease out their high-authority subdomains to spammers.
Attackers post low-quality content on high-authority domains (like .gov or .edu sites) to "piggyback" on their trust.
Search hijacking isn't a single event but a collection of methods used by scammers and "black-hat" SEOs to steal the top spots on Google. This pushes legitimate, helpful content down and replaces it with spam or malware.