If you’ve ever asked a news site to delete an old article and been denied, you’re not alone. Even when a story is outdated, harmful, or no longer relevant, many publishers won’t take it down.
So why the resistance?
Learn More: How to Remove a News Article from Google
1. They Want to Protect the Public Record
Most editors see news articles as part of the historical record. Once something is reported, especially if it was accurate at the time, many journalists believe it should stay available—regardless of how it affects your personal reputation now.
Newsrooms value transparency. Changing or deleting articles can raise ethical concerns about journalistic integrity or accusations of censorship.
2. They’re Following Editorial Policy
Many publishers have strict unpublishing policies. These are internal guidelines that only allow article removal under very specific conditions—like safety threats, legal requirements, or proven inaccuracies.
Unless your situation checks one of those boxes, they’ll likely say no.
3. They’re Worried About Setting a Precedent
Once a publisher removes one story by request, they may get flooded with similar demands. To avoid the slippery slope, they often default to keeping everything live unless there’s a strong, documented reason not to.
In their view, deleting one story could weaken their ability to defend keeping others up.
4. They Don’t Want to Deal With Legal Risk
Deleting or modifying content could expose the outlet to liability. If they remove one story and someone else claims unfair treatment for not getting the same, they open themselves to criticism—or even legal claims of bias or inconsistency.
Keeping articles unchanged is often the safest legal path.
5. There’s Still Traffic or SEO Value
Old articles that get consistent traffic—especially if they’re linked from other websites—are valuable for SEO. Some newsrooms prioritise clicks over cleanup. If an article performs well in search, they’re even less likely to remove it.
So What Can You Do?
Even if a publisher won’t delete the article, you still have options:
- Request redaction or anonymisation (removing your name)
- Ask for de-indexing (hiding it from search engines)
- Use Google’s tools to update or remove search results
- Suppress the article with newer, stronger content
Or, if you want help navigating the process, hire a service like ours that specialises in news removal and search result repair.
Need a hand dealing with stubborn publishers?
Reputation Flare handles the negotiation—and the cleanup. Get a Free Quote to see what’s possible.