Are banner ads coming to the Google homepage? By Staff Reporter | Oct 24, 2013 11:46 PM EDT Well that didnât take very long. As Googleâs ad revenue continues to drop, the company is wasting no time going back on a promise it made to users back in 2005: no banner ads on the web search results page.While the news might come as a surprise to some Google supporters, particularly given the companyâs credo of âDonât be evil,â the search giant has already confirmed its plans to several media outlets including The Guardian and AFP."We're currently running a very limited, US-only test, in which advertisers can include an image as part of the search ads that show in response to certain branded queries," a Google spokesman said in an emailed press statement.Translation: the big banner ads that splash across your screen and take up half a browser window are coming to Google. This is rather unfortunate in light of the companyâs December 2005 pledge promising exactly the opposite. Incidentally, Yahoo chief Marissa Mayer made that promise during her tenure as Googleâs head of search and user experience. "There will be no banner ads on the Google homepage of Web search results pages," Mayer said in a blog post that remained available online Wednesday. "There will not be crazy, flashy, graphical doodads flying and popping up all over the Google site. Ever."If youâre wondering what the big deal is, Googleâs move goes against much of what helped the search engine succeed in the first place. When it first debuted, one of its biggest points of differentiation against competitors like AltaVista and Lycos was its clean, uncluttered interface. Sergey Brin and Larry Page famously declined a $3 million offer from Visa to display an advertisement on its homepage, and this was before Google was even profitable.Though the climate is arguably different for Google nowâAdWords accounts for over 75% of its revenueâitâs still difficult to reconcile the move against the companyâs previous public statements. So far, itâs unclear if and when the banner ads will exit the testing phase and become a proper Google product, but in the meantime, we can hold out hope that rational minds will prevail.