Google is rolling out its AI-native search to all users

Google said at its I/O developer event Tuesday that it’s rolling out its AI-native search to all users for the first time. Previously, users could try Google’s chatbot-based search (then called “Search Generative Experience” (SGE)) by opting into the experience in Google Labs. Now AI search will become available to all users searching for certain subjects or products. 

Unlike traditional Google search, AI search returns a custom-built bundle of text and links—called “AI Overviews”—in response to a user’s plain-language query. 

Google VP of Search Liz Reid told Fast Company that Google’s AI search is powered by the company’s newest and most powerful large language model, Gemini. She also confirmed that Google has been testing the new AI search with a small number of users who have not opted in to SGE. 

Reid pointed out that the AI search experience won’t be invoked by all queries. Navigational queries to specific websites, or short answers to quick questions, she said, are better served by traditional (non-AI) search results (i.e. a ranked list of links). But for more complex or exploratory searches, such as for vacation planning or product queries, Google’s AI search will assemble a custom answer that pulls information from a number of websites, and from a number of Google databases such as local business data or mapping. 

“The fact that you’re not limited by [whether] your question is directly matched with one web page that has the full answer, but you can pull [from] across the corpus of human knowledge really changes the question,” Reid said in an interview with Fast Company on Monday.

Publishers and creatives worry that users will simply get the information they need from the custom answer and not link out to their websites. But Google says that during their tests of the feature, they’ve seen that users are actually more likely to click out to the publisher sites to find further information. Still, the company acknowledged that concern directly in a press release: “As we expand this experience, we’ll continue to focus on sending valuable traffic to publishers and creators,” the release reads.

The AI search Google showed Tuesday at I/O has a couple of new wrinkles that weren’t part of SGE. Users can now show Gemini a video of a problem they have, and the AI can analyze and fix the issue. (Reid used the example of someone whose turntable tonearm wasn’t staying in place.) 

“You don’t even know what’s called the tonearm and you just take a video where it’s moving poorly and say ‘why is this not staying in place?’” Reid told Fast Company. “And it figures out what is the model of the record player. It then tells you that it’s the tonearm. It tells you how to balance the tonearm.”

Google has been under increasing pressure to feature an AI-native “conversational” search experience. Ever since the arrival of ChatGPT in late 2022, consumers have increasingly used AI tools to find content on the internet. Google frames LLMs and chatbots as the latest in a long line of new technologies that it’s leveraged to enhance search. 

OpenAI, Google’s chief rival in the area of generative AI, is rumored to be preparing its own chatbot-based AI search capability. The startup Perplexity has also impressed many in the AI space with its AI-native search, which it calls an “answer engine.” 

“Technology shifts can be medium-size or they can be big, or they can be giant,” Reid said. “This is a giant technology shift, so we think our ability to expand what’s possible is much bigger than, like, five years ago.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91124367/google-ai-search-io-even?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creado 11mo | 14 may 2024, 20:20:04


Inicia sesión para agregar comentarios

Otros mensajes en este grupo.

Nvidia watches its Trump overtures come to naught

Welcome to AI DecodedFast Company’s weekly newsletter that breaks down the most important news in the world of AI. You can sign up to receive this newsletter ever

17 abr 2025, 17:30:02 | Fast company - tech
The AI starter pack trend is taking over LinkedIn and TikTok

What’s in your office starter pack? La Colombe cold brew and a New Yorker subscription? Bose headphones and Brooks Brothers?

Thanks to the latest ChatGPT trend

17 abr 2025, 15:10:07 | Fast company - tech
SpaceX is the top contender to build Trump’s ‘Golden Dome’ missile shield, sources say

Elon Musk’s SpaceX and two partners have emerged as frontrunners to win a crucial part of President Donald Trump’s “Golde

17 abr 2025, 15:10:07 | Fast company - tech
Facebook Groups are fueling a black market for Uber and DoorDash accounts, says a new report

A new watchdog report uncovers Facebook groups quietly fueling a black market fo

17 abr 2025, 12:50:02 | Fast company - tech
He built an AI app to beat coding interviews. Then Columbia suspended him

A software application called Interview Coder promises to help software developers succeed at technical job interviews—by surreptitiously feeding them

17 abr 2025, 10:30:03 | Fast company - tech
GE Vernova’s CEO on thriving through tariffs and supply chain shifts

Amid tariff whiplash and the rejuggling of global trade, GE Vernova’s CEO Scott Strazik is finding a way to stay “relentlessly optimistic.” Strazik returns to the Rapid Response podcast to share h

17 abr 2025, 5:50:02 | Fast company - tech
Tesla’s first quarter EV registrations slump 15.1% in California

Tesla‘s electric-vehicle registrations in California dropped 15.1% during the first quarter, industry data showed, signaling an

16 abr 2025, 22:50:04 | Fast company - tech