In a surprising twist that has the technical SEO community buzzing, Google has silently adopted a protocol it recently dismissed as unnecessary. For months, Google Search Advocates have actively downplayed the utility of the LLMs.txt file, explicitly stating that Googlebot does not use it for crawling or indexing.
They even went so far as to suggest that site owners apply a noindex tag to these files to avoid cluttering search results. Yet, in a cl***ic "do as I say, not as I do" moment, a fully structured llms.txt file has appeared on the Google Search Central documentation portal. This article investigates why Google is implementing this machine-readable standard for Large Language Models despite their public stance, and analyses whether this contradiction signals a shift in AI search optimization strategies for webmasters.
They even went so far as to suggest that site owners apply a noindex tag to these files to avoid cluttering search results. Yet, in a cl***ic "do as I say, not as I do" moment, a fully structured llms.txt file has appeared on the Google Search Central documentation portal. This article investigates why Google is implementing this machine-readable standard for Large Language Models despite their public stance, and analyses whether this contradiction signals a shift in AI search optimization strategies for webmasters.

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