"Google has rolled out a retooled search engine that will
frequently favor responses crafted by artificial intelligence over website
links
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (AP) — Google on Tuesday rolled out a
retooled search engine that will frequently favor responses crafted by
artificial intelligence over website links, a shift promising to quicken the
quest for information while also potentially disrupting the flow of
money-making internet traffic.
The makeover announced at Google’s annual developers
conference will begin this week in the U.S. when hundreds of millions of people
will start to periodically see conversational summaries generated by the
company’s AI technology at the top of the search engine’s results page.
The AI overviews are supposed to only crop up when Google’s
technology determines they will be the quickest and most effective way to
satisfy a user’s curiosity — a solution mostly likely to happen with complex
subjects or when people are brainstorming, or planning. People will likely
still see Google’s traditional website links and ads for simple searches for
things like a store recommendation or weather forecasts.
Google began testing AI overviews with a small subset of
selected users a year ago, but the company is now making it one of the staples
in its search results in the U.S. before introducing the feature in other parts
of the world. By the end of the year, Google expects the recurring AI overviews
to be part of its search results for about 1 billion people.
Besides infusing more AI into its dominant search engine,
Google also used the packed conference held at a Mountain View, California,
amphitheater near its headquarters to showcase advances in a technology that is
reshaping business and society.
The next AI steps included more sophisticated analysis
powered by Gemini — a technology unveiled five months ago — and smarter
assistants, or “agents,” including a still-nascent version dubbed “Astra” that
will be able to understand, explain and remember things it is shown through a
smartphone’s camera lens. Google underscored its commitment to AI by bringing
in Demis Hassabis, the executive who oversees the technology, to appear on
stage at its marquee conference for the first time.
The injection of more AI into Google’s search engine marks
one of the most dramatic changes that the company has made in its foundation
since its inception in the late 1990s. It’s a move that opens the door for more
growth and innovation but also threatens to trigger a sea change in web surfing
habits.
“This bold and responsible approach is fundamental to
delivering on our mission and making AI more helpful for everyone,” Google CEO
Sundar Pichai told a group of reporters.
It also will bring new risks to an internet ecosystem that
depends heavily on digital advertising as its financial lifeblood.
Google stands to suffer if the AI overviews undercuts ads
tied to its search engine — a business that reeled in $175 billion in revenue
last year alone. And website publishers — ranging from major media outlets to
entrepreneurs and startups that focus on more narrow subjects — will be hurt if
the AI overviews are so informative that they result in fewer clicks on the
website links that will still appear lower on the results page.
Based on habits that emerged during the past year’s testing
phase of Google’s AI overviews, about 25% of the traffic could be negatively
affected by the de-emphasis on website links, said Marc McCollum, chief
innovation officer at Raptive, which helps about 5,000 website publishers make
money from their content.
A decline in traffic of that magnitude could translate into
billions of dollars in lost ad revenue, a devastating blow that would be
delivered by a form of AI technology that culls information plucked from many
of the websites that stand to lose revenue.
“The relationship between Google and publishers has been
pretty symbiotic, but enter AI, and what has essentially happened is the Big
Tech companies have taken this creative content and used it to train their AI
models,” McCollum said. “We are now seeing that being used for their own
commercial purposes in what is effectively a transfer of wealth from small,
independent businesses to Big Tech.”
But Google found the AI overviews resulted in people in
conducting even more searches during the technology’s testing “because they
suddenly can ask questions that were too hard before,” said Liz Reid, who
oversees the company’s search operations, told The Associated Press during an
interview. She declined to provide any specific numbers about link-clicking
volume during the tests of AI overviews.
“In reality, people do want to click to the web, even when
they have an AI overview,” Reid said. “They start with the AI overview and then
they want to dig in deeper. We will continue to innovate on the AI overview and
also on how do we send the most useful traffic to the web.”
The increasing use of AI technology to summarize information
in chatbots such as Google’s Gemini and OpenAI’s ChatGPT during the past 18 months
already has been raising legal questions about whether the companies behind the
services are illegally pulling from copyrighted material to advance their
services. It’s an allegation at the heart of a high-profile lawsuit that The
New York Times filed late last year against OpenAI and its biggest backer,
Microsoft.
Google’s AI overviews could provoke lawsuits too, especially
if they siphon away traffic and ad sales from websites that believe the company
is unfairly profiting from their content. But it’s a risk that the company had
to take as the technology advances and is used in rival services such as
ChatGPT and upstart search engines such as Perplexity, said Jim Yu, executive
chairman of BrightEdge, which helps websites rank higher in Google’s search
results.
“This is definitely the next chapter in search,” Yu said.
“It’s almost like they are tuning three major variables at once: the search
quality, the flow of traffic in the ecosystem and then the monetization of that
traffic. There hasn’t been a moment in search that is bigger than this for a
long time.””
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