No, things just should not be getting featured snippets unless they're noteworthy, & snippet should not come from untrustworthy sites.
"They" here is Google. Choice of what to present as search results (i.e. choice to add the featured snippets) is a design choice.
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as a company of 57k employes? thats the problem, you are living in the last century, where one person is behind a computer. Here is not.
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The snippets are generated automagically , a single person cant be responsible , an a machine can be tricket to have "quakery" results
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Apparently you missed the part where I said if they can't avoid that then the feature should not exist at all.
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But they CAN easily avoid that. Failure to do so is a policy choice, not technical inability or cost-prohibitive.
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substitute "they" for google , and think about it, a company objetive is make money. Not be true.
End of conversation
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And it's one with radical impact on what ordinary users perceive as truth. If they can't design this responsibly, it shouldn't exist at all.
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THis is not a problem that can be "solved" by having a person behind a computer, this is a problem thet need to be adressed at use level
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if the user have not "common sense" neither the machine or the "operator" behind can solve it
End of conversation
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