Google's API Leak Revealed the Three Click Metrics That Drive Rankings

The leaked code confirmed what Google denied for years: clicks directly influence rankings.

Over 14,000 internal Google API documents leaked in May 2024, exposing the specific click metrics NavBoost uses to adjust rankings. Here's what they revealed.

Publicado el : Marzo, 12 2026 Autora : William Scotia 3 min read

For years, Google told the SEO industry that clicks don't influence rankings.

Then, in May 2024, over 14,000 internal API documents leaked via GitHub. And the code told a very different story.

Three metrics. Right there in the documentation.

The leaked documents revealed that Google's NavBoost system — the same ranking system confirmed during the DOJ antitrust trial — tracks three specific click metrics: “goodClicks,” “badClicks,” and “lastLongestClicks.”

These aren't vague references to user satisfaction. They're named variables in production code. NavBoost uses them within a rolling 13-month window to adjust rankings based on how real users interact with search results.

Rand Fishkin, who first analyzed the leak publicly, called it “the most significant leak in Google's history.”

That's not hyperbole when you consider what these documents actually show.

It gets more specific.

The leak also exposed a system called CRAPS (yes, really) that processes raw click data into demotion scores. When a page accumulates enough “badClicks” — short visits where users bounce back to the search results — CRAPS generates signals that push that page down in rankings.

The inverse is also true. Pages that earn “goodClicks” and “lastLongestClicks” — where users stay, engage, and don't return to Google looking for a better answer — get a ranking boost through NavBoost.

This isn't a theory built from correlations. This is Google's own internal architecture, exposed in their own documentation.

Why Google denied it.

Google has long maintained that clicks are too noisy and too easily manipulated to use as a ranking signal.

Eric Lehman, a Google engineer, stated under oath during the antitrust trial that “clicks are the main signal used by Navboost.”

But Google's public-facing position remained that click data was only used for evaluation, not for live rankings.

The API leak made that position impossible to maintain. The code doesn't lie — even when the press statements do.

What this means for your SEO strategy.

If you've been focused exclusively on content quality, backlinks, and technical SEO, you've been working on one side of the equation. The API leak confirmed that user engagement — specifically how people click on and interact with your search listings — feeds directly into the ranking system.

The three metrics are straightforward:

• Google wants to see that users click on your result (goodClicks)
• That they stay on your page (lastLongestClicks)
• That they don't bounce back to try a different result (avoiding badClicks)

Every click order through SerpClix sends exactly these signals. Real humans searching for your keyword, clicking your listing, and spending time on your page. That's a goodClick and a lastLongestClick in Google's own terminology.


SerpClix uses an army of over 400,000 real human clickers to boost your organic CTR. Get started with a free trial or log in to your dashboard to set up your next click order.

Tenga en cuenta que no existen garantías en la optimización de motores de búsqueda. Hay innumerables factores que pueden afectar las clasificaciones de los motores de búsqueda y, siendo realistas, la mayoría de los sitios deberían centrar sus esfuerzos en el SEO tradicional antes de pensar siquiera en utilizar técnicas no tradicionales como SerpClix. Todos los esfuerzos de SEO pueden implicar un elemento de riesgo. Algunas técnicas son ciertamente más riesgosas que otras. SerpClix emplea clickers humanos reales, por lo que creemos que nuestro servicio es mucho menos riesgoso que intentar utilizar métodos de clics automatizados o robóticos. Pero, como todas las estrategias de SEO, existe un elemento de riesgo porque el algoritmo de Google es desconocido y está sujeto a cambios en cualquier momento. Para obtener más información, consulte nuestras Preguntas frecuentes para compradores.

Empiece hoy mismo

Es fácil comenzar a usar SerpClix. Nuestra oferta es completamente de autoservicio y fácil de usar. Los pedidos de clics son fáciles de crear e incluyen una calculadora simple para ayudarlo a determinar cuántos clics solicitar según su palabra clave y su clasificación actual.

Nuestras membresías son siempre mes a mes: no se requieren contratos a largo plazo.