Daily Nation Newspaper

Google finally cleans up its Esta ads after eight years

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GOOGLE says it will stop ads for expensive unofficial Esta services appearing at the top of search results, eight years after the first complaints.

In 2010, the US started charging UK travellers to use the Electronic System for Travel Authorisat­ion (Esta).

Unofficial sites charging five times as much as the US government soon flooded the top of Google’s search results, despite breaking Google’s ad rules.

Now, after a BBC News investigat­ion, Google says it is tackling the issue.

While unofficial Esta sites will still appear in the search results, they should no longer appear above the official website as advertisem­ents when using the most common search terms.

Since it has used machine learning to address the issue, the ads do still show up for some search terms. Google says this will improve in time. The official Esta website is run by the US Department for Homeland Security.

It charges $14 (£10.70) for each Esta applicatio­n.

But countless unofficial sites appeared at the top of Google search results by buying advertisem­ents.

These unofficial sites charged more than $80 for an Esta applicatio­n. Google’s advertisin­g policies explicitly forbid “charging for products or services where the primary offering is available from a government or public source for free or at a lower price”.

The company did take down ads that were manually reported by its users, but the same websites would soon reappear with a new web address.

The BBC sent several unofficial Esta ads to Google and asked why they had been allowed to remain on the platform.

One of the websites advertised on Google was charging $99 (£76) per Esta.

Google took the ads down, but others immediatel­y filled the space. After the BBC supplied more of the unofficial Esta ads, Google said it would look into the problem.

It later said it had been able to develop its machine learning process to wipe out the unofficial Esta ads.

Following the change, commonly used Esta search terms no longer carry ads for the unofficial services.

Some less common searches may still return ads while the algorithm continues to learn, but the most obvious ones such as “esta” should no longer show ads, it said.

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