Google’s decision to partially roll back its plan to deactivate all goo.gl links marks a rare moment of reverse-engineering policy in the face of widespread user concern. Originally, the company had set August 25, 2025, as the cutoff for every URL created with its goo.gl shortener, which launched in December 2009 and ceased new link creation in March 2019. The rationale was straightforward: usage had dwindled to almost nothing, with over 99 percent of goo.gl links registering zero clicks in mid-2024. But as the shutdown loomed, it became clear that even a tiny sliver of active links still mattered to individuals and organizations who had embedded them in presentations, social posts, academic papers and corporate intranets.
Nine months ago—around November 2024—Google began tagging “inactive” goo.gl URLs with a warning banner, signaling they’d be disabled on August 25th. Those early warnings affected links that hadn’t seen any traffic since late 2024, giving users nearly a year to migrate important ones. Yet, many realized too late that even an occasional click was enough to classify a link as “active,” and that untangling thousands of embedded URLs across the web was no small task. As criticism grew—echoed by digital preservation experts warning of mass link rot—the company took note of the broad reliance on goo.gl stretches well beyond casual sharing.
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On Friday, Google’s official Developers blog announced the adjustment: “While we previously announced discontinuing support for all goo.gl URLs after August 25, 2025, we’ve adjusted our approach in order to preserve actively used links.” In practice, this means only those goo.gl URLs already displaying the deactivation message (the ones silent since late 2024) will go dark next month. Every other goo.gl link—whether it’s hiding in a decade-old blog post or a pinned Slack message—will continue redirecting “as normal,” indefinitely.
The partial backtrack underscores a persistent challenge for tech giants juggling innovation with stewardship of legacy services. Google has a well-documented history of sunsetting products—think Reader, Stadia and more—but bluntly terminating foundational tools risks erasing swaths of digital memory. As Harvard’s Jack Cushman and Old Dominion’s Michael L. Nelson have pointed out, link decay in academic and legal documents can cripple research integrity; for example, nearly half of the URLs in Supreme Court opinions no longer worked after a decade.
Looking ahead, Google is gently nudging users toward modern alternatives, notably Firebase Dynamic Links (FDL), which replaced goo.gl internally in 2019. FDL offers richer analytics, deep-linking capabilities for apps, and better security controls—features that most URL shorteners now emphasize. But for anyone still clinging to goo.gl, the message is clear: even though your links survive for now, it’s wise to export and rehost critical redirects elsewhere to avoid uncertainty down the line.
For digital archivists and everyday link-sharers alike, this episode is a reminder of the fragility of third-party services. Tools like the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, Perma.cc, and self-hosted redirectors can safeguard against abrupt deprecations. Meanwhile, Google’s about-face shows that user feedback can still sway big-tech timelines—if only partially and at the eleventh hour. Whether this becomes a template for future reversals remains to be seen, but for now, your goo.gl links have earned a reprieve.
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