simonw 1 hour ago

Nilay Patel has been talking about "Google Zero" - the moment when Google effectively stops sending any traffic to other sites - for a few years now: https://www.theverge.com/24167865/google-zero-search-crash-h...

  • ekidd 1 hour ago

    Which as some running a website raises a fascinating question. If Google is just going to crawl my sites and present information as an AI summary on their site, then what exactly do I gain by allowing Googlebot to crawl my sites?

    • whazor 1 hour ago

      Websites tend to be updated and considered to be the source as well.

    • Andrex 1 hour ago

      Free speculation: I could see a future where Google populates a footer on results with the website logos of the sources. Presumably, the new web will require users to memorize websites/brands and go directly to those sites if they see a lot of their results are being provided by one source.

      Websites may go back to being simply labors of love.

      • victor106 37 minutes ago

        >I could see a future where Google populates a footer on results with the website logos of the sources.

        ChatGPT/Claude does this today. I barely click or care for the source when they already have me the info I wanted.

        My speculation is all information worth anything is going to be behind some kind of wall.

        • nozzlegear 8 minutes ago

          > ChatGPT/Claude does this today. I barely click or care for the source when they already have me the info I wanted.

          Maybe I'm just #builtdifferent, but I click these a lot. Especially if I'm trying to research or make a decision on something, I want the actual source and not the potentially-fudged summary.

      • runako 17 minutes ago

        > Websites may go back to being simply labors of love.

        The situation may be even worse. Back in the labor of love era, at least webmasters could get feedback from readers. In the LLM era, readers may not even know that the site exists. Without feedback/community, the overall quality of those sites will decrease over time.

    • pflenker 1 hour ago

      A couple of years back I worked with a company which maintained specific data which was the main traffic driver on that page. Google approached them and wanted to pay for the rights to get the data and display it on top of the search results, a feature which was fairly new back then.

      This was an interesting dilemma because it was very clear that the money was way less than the loss in ad revenue due to traffic drop, but it was also clear that if we wouldn’t take the deal, a more desperate competitor would, which would result in the same traffic loss but without the extra google money. So the company took the deal.

      History repeats itself here, with the difference that instead of paying for the data, the ai crawlers simply take it for free.

      • iamtedd 1 hour ago

        Real-world Prisoner's Dilemma.

        • jonshariat 55 minutes ago

          It always comes back to game theory haha

      • drcongo 16 minutes ago

        "Nice data you got there, it'd be a shame if something were to happen to it"

    • thedelanyo 1 hour ago

      > then what exactly do I gain by allowing Googlebot to crawl my sites?

      Mention

      • lacewing 10 minutes ago

        It's worse than that. They train their models preferentially on what they consider to be high-quality data. But if you look at the usual "references" on search queries, they're often just a post-hoc BS justification that links to spam blogs or Tiktok videos.

    • swarnie 1 hour ago

      Allow? Deep down, do you think you have a choice?

      Mechanisms might exist to make you think you have one, the same way copywrite should prevent millions of books being gobbled up by TheZuck but ultimately do you really have a choice?

      Rules and laws don't exists for you.

      • alt227 1 hour ago

        Yes, Google advertises its crawler IP ranges and it is quite easy to keep track of this and block them. But only if you control the infrastructure that your site runs on of course.

        • rolph 43 minutes ago

          stego your site, google sees the red herring version, intended users see the payload.

          this has been done before, quite often, but toward ends morally askew.

    • coldpie 58 minutes ago

      > allowing Googlebot to crawl my sites

      As far as I know, you don't have a choice. They have no obligation to respect your wishes, and LLMs are legally allowed to scrape & republish your content.

      • margalabargala 45 minutes ago

        > They have no obligation to respect your wishes

        I have no obligation to not send all scraper-looking traffic to a black hole full of zip bombs.

      • oh_no 11 minutes ago

        except google does respect robots.txt so you do have a choice?

    • tedd4u 57 minutes ago

      Vastly less but still more traffic than if you didn’t participate. I’m sure they will calibrate it just so.

    • wvenable 49 minutes ago

      It's a catch-22. Without google crawling your site, you don't get any new traffic. But with google crawling your site, you also might not get any traffic.

      AI summarization has already causes issues for sites like rtings where people are no longer visiting the site but still making use of the data presented there. Leading to rtings not getting enough traffic to continue to post their data.

      It is an existential crisis for websites and when they go away it'll be an existential crisis for AI.

      • elevation 44 minutes ago

        > Without google crawling your site, you don't get any new traffic

        What about the stories of marketing managers who learned months after the fact that their credit card had expired and their google ad spend had ceased with no affect on traffic? Google isn't always an effective promotional vehicle.

        • maccard 36 minutes ago

          What stories are they?

        • loloquwowndueo 25 minutes ago

          Sounds like a pretty ineffective manager: wasn’t buying the correct ad placement in the first place, used a personal card to sign up for an ostensibly corporate service, didn’t keep track of expiration dates for the card, and was also ignoring email notifications from Google about the expired card. Let me know if I’m missing any other reasons why this manager should be fired instantly.

          • elictronic 17 minutes ago

            Most large corporations have company credit cards. The user is likely referring to his card being the company card.

      • monooso 36 minutes ago

        That's some catch, that catch-22.

      • kxrm 31 minutes ago

        > Without google crawling your site, you don't get any new traffic. But with google crawling your site, you also might not get any traffic.

        I may be strange and unusual, but I just have never cared about my Google ranking. I know this makes me out of the ordinary among site owners but I have been humming along fine.

        This certainly will disrupt traffic but for some of my sites I honestly think this is a good thing. I want you to want to be there, not just stumble upon my site because you happen to hit the right search keyword. Plus if it gets bad, this does create a new opportunity for others with cross linking and search.

    • deaton 44 minutes ago

      What you gain? Nothing, but they and other AI companies have decided not to respect your robots.txt

      • loloquwowndueo 24 minutes ago

        There are other ways to block robots from crawling our sites. I have a robots.txt but place no faith in it, it’s just there because it’s cheap and does stop some of the crawlers.

    • pokot0 29 minutes ago

      Internet is more and more becoming a commercialization platform. If you are selling something on your website, you still want Google (or ChatGPT for that matters) to expose customers to your product. The gate is the actual delivery of the product is behind a purchase/signup. Google and others want to control the entire customer journey, to the point the your website is simply a way to pass metadata to them. They are actually achieving this!

      this kills the entire internet vibe of the 90s, early 2k

    • franze 13 minutes ago

      well its already happening and people are fighting over traffic crumbs already, they call it GEO

    • UltraSane 6 minutes ago

      Can you actually prevent Google from crawling your site?

  • SoftTalker 1 hour ago

    The web as we know it is over.

    Websites will die on the vine if LLMs intermediate all the content.

    The "website" of the future will be an API optimized for LLM crawlers, serving plain-text content that no end-user will ever view directly. The SEO game will change to LLMAO.

    • ben_w 48 minutes ago

      > Websites will die on the vine if LLMs intermediate all the content.

      The current zeitgeist of them will, but I think not all.

      My first website (GeoCities) was either before Google existed or very close to it. Connected to people via WebRings and directory listings. More recently, RSS feeds.

      • SoftTalker 43 minutes ago

        Yeah their will likely continue be a small underground of old-style websites I guess. But you'll have to be in the loop on how to find them, and very few people will pay to advertise on them.

        • mrec 37 minutes ago

          > very few people will pay to advertize on them

          That sounds like an unalloyed plus. The perverse incentives caused by advertising have been the biggest driver of the web's decline, IMO.

    • BrunoBernardino 44 minutes ago

      Alternatively, we can collectively "fight back" by not using Google and teaching others around us to do so as well. There are plenty of decent [1] and great (better) alternatives, where you're not the product [2]!

      [1]: https://alternativeto.net/software/google-search/?license=fr...

      [2]: https://alternativeto.net/software/google-search/?license=co...

    • abirch 38 minutes ago

      Here is what I think the future web may look like:

         1) Sites will have mcp / APIs for LLMs. So that when I ask my AI Agent du jour. It can call any of the sites where I have subscriptions for information. 
         2) Sites that are passion projects will be harvested by our LLM overlords.
         3) Sites that people don't type into their web browser and need ad revenue will die.
         4) SEO will finally die.
    • thisisit 7 minutes ago

      Or more likely move towards substack or newsletters where the pitch is - Don’t let the LLM chose the output for you, go directly to our Substack/newsletter instead.

      This will happen especially with things like conspiracy theories because the choice might be to pollute the output or share the general consensus. Like searches for Apollo landing conspiracy theories can either chose to present “alternate facts” so that people can “do their own research” and conclude it is fake or LLM auto corrects to “Apollo landing happened”.

  • CSMastermind 13 minutes ago

    This was the promise of Bing that never materialized.

imoverclocked 1 hour ago

I don't trust facts from LLMs. When I am searching for something, I usually want to find primary sources. As soon as a number is involved, I do my best to not even look at the AI output.

Even though the result is often good and combines information from multiple sources, it can also get things wrong by combining information from different eras or just plain outdated advice. AFAICT, without primary sources, the result is for entertainment purposes only.

  • nostrademons 1 hour ago

    You can ask them to cite their sources. It's very good practice to do so, and to check those sources, because I've found that about 30-40% of the time their source doesn't support their answer at all.

    • dbbk 1 hour ago

      All of Google AI Mode is sourced.

      • skywhopper 1 hour ago

        Yes, and those sources often contradict the AI summary if you follow them (or if you know anything about the topic).

        • bsimpson 37 minutes ago

          A common pattern:

          Type your question in Android/Chrome search bar:

          "Is …?"

          AI Overview on the search results page:

          "No…"

          Click through to the AI mode tab/"Dive deeper with AI" CTA:

          "Yes…"

    • nilamo 1 hour ago

      If it's wrong 2 out of 5 times, why even waste your time going to it in the first place? That's a massive failure rate.

      • nostrademons 52 minutes ago

        If I'm going to an LLM (as with websearch before it), it's usually because I don't know the answer, don't have anyone close to me that knows the answer, and can't pay anyone (or don't know who to pay) for the answer. In other words, my failure rate without the LLM would be 100%.

      • SkyBelow 51 minutes ago

        Because being right 60% of the time with minimal work is still amazing, as long as one accounts for the failure rate correctly.

        Say I want to look up some game from my childhood, which I barely remember any details for. Going to google and trying is likely going to be very difficult unless I happen to get lucky with some key element. But if an LLM can get it right even a minority of the time, it can lead to me quickly finding the game I'm looking for.

        This does depend upon the ability to evaluate the answer, like checking against source or some other option where you know a good answer from bad. If you can't, then it does become much more dangerous. Perhaps part of the reason AI seem to empower experts more than novices in some domains?

      • wvenable 40 minutes ago

        I don't find it nearly that bad. If I really need factual information, it will generally go off and read the data from primary sources anyway. So unless it's really misunderstanding context, you're getting the data from the source.

        • elictronic 13 minutes ago

          It really matters the task. General knowledge from Wikipedia, great. Things more specific, with any thought needing to be used, or technical fields outside of software his numbers are pretty close to mine.

      • javawizard 20 minutes ago

        Because it finds the sources much quicker than I would have been able to on my own, and I can then synthesize them into data I know is correct, as correct as any human-generated data can be of course.

    • thfuran 1 hour ago

      If it even exists.

    • masfuerte 1 hour ago

      Yes, but this is much more effort than a traditional search result that has a relevant quote from the source right there.

    • puttycat 1 hour ago

      ChatGPT is the only bot that reliably cites sources (through Web search mode).

      The other bots either make up links or simply don't provide any information that is distinguishable from the LLM predictive output.

      Ironically Gemini is also very bad at this, while it should have been the best at Web search.

      Gemini also does something very patchy, which is to provide "links" which are in fact GET queries into classic Google search. I'm guessing they did it this way because the links generated/hallucinated by the LLM were too unreliable.

    • lunar_mycroft 1 hour ago

      If I have to read the sources anyway, why not just have the model give me the links themselves? You know, like search engines already do?

      • jrmg 1 hour ago

        Search engines don’t do that any more - they just give you a bunch of SEO spam sites, now mostly filled with plausible slop. Answers from search are _less_ reliable than answers from an LLM now.

        I worry that the LLMs are just the equivalent of a ‘lagging indicator’ of web quality though - that they will also soon be overwhelmed with the sheer volume of plausible nonsense that is the web now, just like search engines are.

        Model collapse everywhere.

  • skybrian 1 hour ago

    Sometimes I use chatgpt thinking mode for searches when I expect there will be a lot of noise. "What are some in-depth reviews for <some book I've heard of>"

    Have you tried explicitly asking for links to primary sources?

  • Yokohiii 14 minutes ago

    Even before the AI era I slowly became less and less successful with google searches. Everything - non trivial / specific - that I looked for turned into a chore and I quickly gave up.

    LLMs, that can supply valid links, give me a completely different variety of results. Either I am too dumb to search manually, too impatient or google search is just broken, but Gemini usually gives me something I can work with. I just wished I could blacklist some sources like medium.

pclowes 1 hour ago

I understand why they are doing this. My Google search usage is easily down 50%+. I doubt I am unique here.

While there are times where I want pure search (Kagi, Old Google) I mostly use LLMs to search now and have them provide me links for source data.

When I do use LLMs as a search engine I always want it integrated into my AI workflows with access to tools and scripts etc. I never want to have a conversation with a website that is geared towards advertising me products.

  • ivraatiems 1 hour ago

    I'm not at all in the same boat as you; I do not and likely will never primarily rely on LLMs for information. But it's fascinating to hear that even folks who do don't find this approach useful.

    • deepfriedbits 1 hour ago

      I'm not jumping in with both feet, either, but "never" is a very big word.

      • ivraatiems 1 hour ago

        "Primarily" is the other key there. I'll use it from time to time with sources. But it's not first-line acceptable.

    • Corence 1 hour ago

      I think LLMs are better at finding the most helpful sources now, but that's more a testament to how much the front page of web search has lost to low value LLM content.

      • embedding-shape 1 hour ago

        The fact that you can express "Only show me websites run by Italian companies incorporated by Greece owners born in Turkey" for example, and it'll be able to filter through a bunch of stuff, just makes searching so much easier. Fuzzy-search is also on another level with language models.

        • bdangubic 1 hour ago

          this is exactly it… if google was smart they would focus on providing that experience on search vs. AI summarizing results. I want that fluid search experience, with refinement that remembers my previous ask…

        • gnatolf 1 hour ago

          Interestingly enough, precise search is on the way out.

          • embedding-shape 1 hour ago

            Yeah, which makes no sense, talk about shooting yourself in the foot, but this is big tech, part of the process to irrelevancy I suppose.

          • ignu 1 hour ago

            I'm pretty sure there'd be a double-digit drop in LLM use if Google hasn't made search worse every year for the last decade.

          • wvenable 44 minutes ago

            Precise search has been dead for a long time.

    • BobbyTables2 1 hour ago

      For me, Google search results have gotten so poor (and other engines aren’t any better), that I’d rather just ask an online LLM for what I’m looking for.

      I was once very good at advanced Google search queries but they seem to no longer respect such queries - either showing irrelevant results or none at all (that should exist).

      I don’t love LLMs, but they seem to not make up stuff very often these days and usually cite links to what they summarized. Sometimes the tone of the summary is slightly wrong “algorithm X was designed for Y” (when I know it wasn’t) but it’s otherwise very close to the mark.

      What does amaze me, is the LLM seems to “understand” my question with very little context — I would have to give a human many more details about goals/intent.

      I know damn LLMs are not capable of thought and are just a glorified search engine, but they do it well. Perhaps all my education made me little more…

      I used to mock Sci-Fi movies where characters lazily dictated questions to the computer and it gave high quality answers.

      We’re living in that world now.

      • jolt42 1 hour ago

        Yep, really advanced Google searches were never that good. LLM, yeah, it halucinates, it's never spot on but as sure as heck it knows what I'm trying to ask. It doesn't give me arborists if I say something like "list tree searches".

      • sonofhans 57 minutes ago

        Kagi is better. Kagi is damn good, as much a revelation as the Google of old. Not free, though.

        • travisgriggs 42 minutes ago

          Been using Kagi search for more than a year. Been happy. I use GPT/et al for the little things (e.g. unit conversions, rather than search for and then try to use an enshittified web page from 10 years ago). But for actual real tech leaning content, Kagi has been pretty good.

        • terribleperson 34 minutes ago

          As a user and fan of kagi, the problem with kagi is that it reveals how badly degraded the web is.

          The vast majority of original content is now in one or another social network or on discord. News articles are an exception, though the news has its own problems. Some wikis still exist and are actively maintained, of course, but not a ton. If it's a topic that's academically studied you might find information in papers, but those have poor web visibility and are better located with specialty tools. LLMs seem to be quite good at locating papers, though.

        • ndiddy 11 minutes ago

          I've used Kagi for a few years but it's gotten significantly worse for me the last year or so. I'm curious if anyone else has seen the same thing happen. I'll search for something and usually see a bunch of barely relevant SEO sites. Avoiding this is why I started paying for Kagi in the first place, so it's been disappointing to see. Marginalia Search (https://marginalia-search.com/) seems to be better at finding content written by humans rather than SEO specialists, but it's not a silver bullet (for example, the last time I checked they didn't index non-English sites).

    • snailmailman 1 hour ago

      LLMs are so frequently inaccurate its crazy to think of it fully replacing search.

      I've been trying to use LLMs for things and it makes mistakes all the time. Just this week i had multiple instances of various LLMs basically saying "just run the software with --flag-that-fixes-your-problem" or "edit the config and add solve-your-issue=true" hallucinating non-existant options. Even if i manually link the relevant documentation pages it will still just make basic mistakes. and if im having to read the documentation myself anyway to fix the AI's mistakes, why is the AI even in the loop.

      its infecting search too, because blogspam/slop articles are managing to make their way into search results by just making up untrue information, claiming software can do things it cant, or has options that don't exist.

      • wvenable 42 minutes ago

        Perhaps I've just internalized it -- I know that's unreliable and I just deal with it. LLMs are certainly capable of searching the web and finding the right answer directly so you still don't have to read the documentation.

    • jerf 1 hour ago

      LLMs-as-search-proxies have some pretty nice capabilities. For instance you can say "limit your search to scientific papers" and they'll do a much nicer job. I've also had some success recently prompting them with "I'm looking for reputable sources", e.g. recently I was looking for ways to repel deer from my apple tres. A naive internet search had vendors of shady crap jumping me. The LLMs pulled up relevant papers and university extension programs from my area.

      Though I will say I get much better results from the LLMs I pay for than the free ones with Google or DuckDuckGo, which seem to be way way way more prone to just make crap up based on your search and cite web pages that, when followed, don't have the claim being made in the AI search results at all. By contrast every "source" link I've followed in the for-money AIs has 100% backed what the AI said it backed. Don't judge by the free AIs the search engines put out, those things are probably starved of resources and are nearly useless.

      (Which I did not intend as a commentary on Google's plans here, but it is a data point of interest... that pressure to cut costs on the "free" services is quite directly at odds with providing quality AI services for the forseeable future.)

      • chrismorgan 59 minutes ago

        Just today, I think that I got a useful citation in DuckDuckGo’s Search Assist (AI stuff) sources for the very first time. The sources it lists have hitherto invariably been already right there in the regular results, or actually not supporting the AI output at all (the far more common case). There was also a useful regular search result in second or third position, but the one in the Search Assist citations was better, and not in the regular search results, even on the second page.

        And I’ve tried Google’s once or twice and seen it used once or twice, and used ChatGPT exactly once, last week, and I was not at all impressed by any of them. Their output, for what I’ve personally seen, has been nonsense, obvious, or unverifiable.

    • cyanydeez 1 hour ago

      My google use is down because it turned to garbage. They're likely doing this because they poisoned their own well besides the advent of LLMs.

    • ignu 1 hour ago

      As someone who was getting information this way most of last year, I'm pretty sure I'll never want to again.

      An increasing number of studies are indicating a reliance on "AI" leads to deleterious cognitive effects. I felt this acutely myself.

      I've noticed a significant boost to my recall since shunning "AI" as much as possible.

    • VLM 1 hour ago

      As a concrete example, some advertising supported topics place search as an unwanted middleman, may as well ask a LLM directly. Consider "chocolate chip cookie recipe".

      Using google search, will return roughly infinite recipe sites. The sites were generated to spam AI generated recipes surrounded by advertisements. None of them are really any good because they were generated by a script and not looked at by a human until I come along and click. The standard is for all recipes to have at least 10-15 screenfulls of vertical spam wrapped by ads for recipe pages. The internet, at least using Search, is now useless for food recipes. I would have better, faster luck driving to the public library and looking in a physical cookbook; at least those recipes were probably tested at least once by humans unlike the advertising spam sites. Nobody has 45 minutes to watch 44 minutes of filler material surrounded by ads on Youtube either. If you want to cook food, the internet is near dead at this time, unfortunately.

      AI search will plagiarize the "Original Nestle Toll House" recipe from the back of every bag of chocolate chips ever made. Its a good recipe and I've baked them many times over the decades.

      I wish the internet were more useful, but the people in charge of it don't want it to be useful; here have some ragebait and doomscroll while watching the ads.

    • m-schuetz 37 minutes ago

      Search results are 80% SEO low-quality garbage nowadays. Very often, the sites even generate their content with AI. So for many use cases I stopped bothering with search and directly ask LLMs instead.

    • adamtaylor_13 33 minutes ago

      LLM hallucinations are better than Google results these days and I'm not even trying to tell a silly joke. It's more useful for an LLM to lie to my face about 10% of my query, be suspicious and dig out that useful information than to try to parse the absolute slop returned by a normal, non-AI Google query.

      I don't comprehend how the average person gets any useful information out of Google.

  • cortesoft 1 hour ago

    That’s the thing… sure, this new search will be useful at times.

    But I still want to also be able to do my normal, old school searching.

  • zemo 1 hour ago

    > I never want to have a conversation with a website that is geared towards advertising me products.

    yeah man good thing LLMs are structurally incapable of being incentivized to sell you a product or render referral links, this is surely future-proof

    • NietzscheanNull 1 hour ago

      Or subtly misrepresent politically inconvenient facts, or gently steer you into opinions based on a synthesis of broker data and demographic info, or quietly flag you in some database column due to exhibiting dissident-adjacent ideas or behaviors, or...

      Yeah, they probably aren't doing (most of) these now, but it doesn't take much mental energy to extrapolate once you factor nearly every other tech company's ethical trajectory and the current geopolitical environment. Substituting classic search entirely with LLMs is not a savvy move.

      • pclowes 1 hour ago

        Doesn’t classic search literally already do everything you fear LLM’s will?

        • NietzscheanNull 40 minutes ago

          Certainly, but with (what I consider to be) a key distinction: classic search, by definition, must serve information from many distinct sources outside the control of the search company.

          A search engine could certainly tamper with which of these sources they surface/rank higher (which I suspect happening more often of late), but they're still obliged by their nature to branch out and seek information from the broader world.

          LLMs, on the other hand, are self-contained opaque monoliths that can be conditioned to deceive or obfuscate with devious cleverness, and all control over their behaviors is entirely concentrated in the hands of whatever corporation trains them.

          • pclowes 25 minutes ago

            I ask them for sources. It’s just a more efficient vector based search for most of my google search replacement use cases.

    • pclowes 1 hour ago

      My thought here is that there are many. They have proven to be commodities in most use cases.

      As soon as one gets annoying, expensive, advertiser heavy etc. you just rip it out and replace it with the other one. AFAICT there is zero lock-in or moat. I often am able to switch models in one click or command. This is why all the LLM providers are desperate for a product layer/comprehensive tool set.

      Sure maybe they all end up that way, but there’s plenty of reasons corporate customers will want private LLM usage that is not skewed towards advertising. I am happy to pay for that.

      Also, open source models are a bulwark against another search style ad Monopoly.

  • zkmon 1 hour ago

    > I never want to have a conversation with a website that is geared towards advertising me products.

    The advertisements fed the content, which fed the AI, which in turn feeds your AI workflows. AI is still not trusted unless it's output is grounded with sources.

  • Sharlin 1 hour ago

    About 90% of my searches are straightforward enough that an LLM wouldn't bring any added value (and all of them happen straight from the browser address bar, either to Google or Wikipedia at a more or less 50:50 ratio). And for the rest, yeah, I just use Claude or whatever directly.

  • snapetom 1 hour ago

    We all know Google search has been broken for a long, long time. SEO trash will fill up your first page with results from trash content generation sites that repeat the same thing, usually flat out wrong. Actual meaningful results are buried deep, if Google will even let out of the "In order to show you the most relevant results" hell hole.

    My experience with AI searches is that they'll still be wrong a lot of times, but it will condense/flatten the content generating trash sites and give me alternatives from these deeper results. What I'm looking for is usally in there.

  • skiing_crawling 1 hour ago

    I use claude/gemini as my homepage now (I have to keep switching as these companies make "updates" that periodically render their models useless). Even if I want to search for simple things, I would rather have an LLM wade through the result and extract just the information I asked for. SEO, and now mountains of slop content have made this necessary. Only a matter of time before the SEO industry in large figures out how to game LLMs too, making them equally useless.

    I already saw a article recently about how to set up a business domain which can reliably show up in a search result and dump overly positive reviews into anyone's context.

  • SoftTalker 1 hour ago

    "I never want to have a conversation with a website that is geared towards advertising me products."

    Since this is how Google makes all their money, why are they killing it off? Do they think people will eventually pay for LLM search? Do they plan to stuff the results with ads, not even sharing the ad revenue with the content sources?

  • mghackerlady 1 hour ago

    I think LLMs are good answer engines, but terrible search engines. For example, if I just want the answer to "How do I foo this bar with a thingamajig", or "what kind of foo exists for bar", LLMs are 100% better because they'll give me an answer without trying to sell me their thing or pump me with ads. It also lets me go more in depth than the very surface level seo spam sites that appear when you do a search like this. On the other hand, search engines should be more like "<thing>s released 1908" or "<topic> and give you results talking about what you searched. If I search for C algorithm design, I don't want to learn what C is, what an algorithm is, and various other seo garbage. I want to learn about C algorithms and their design. If I search for influential books from 1908, I don't want "top 10 classics from the 1900s" or "hidden gems of 1908".

    Currently, search engines are pretty bad at the second one because people try to use them as the first one

    • kibwen 46 minutes ago

      > they'll give me an answer without trying to sell me their thing or pump me with ads

      Surely we all understand that any commercial model is going to inevitably metastasize into this.

    • wvenable 45 minutes ago

      > On the other hand, search engines should be more like "<thing>s released 1908" or "<topic> and give you results talking about what you searched.

      Is that useful enough to build a billion dollar advertising business around? My feeling now is not really.

      Even for straight up searches, I find using an LLM to do a search and comb through the results is a better experience than Google is now for searching. If I'm specifically looking for esoteric web sites from 27 years ago on vintage computer hardware and software (thank god for Archive.org), Google is just ok for that.

    • kibwen 31 minutes ago

      Other way around. If I'm looking for the answer to a problem, I don't want the hallucination engine's half-remembered ramblings, I want the primary source that it's poorly attempting to reconstruct. But finding those primary sources has the potential to be easier, because LLMs effectively have built-in fuzzy search better than any classic search engine ever implemented.

      In other words, I have no use for an LLM summarizer; I want an LLM librarian, working with me to say "beep-boop, here are some resources that seem relevant to your query, feel free to resume this session later if you'd like to further refine your search".

  • thefourthchime 8 minutes ago

    Maybe I'm weird, but I find AI incredibly useful.

    I've barely used Google for over 2 years.

    I barely driven myself in a year.

    I haven't written code in 6 months.

nraleigh 21 minutes ago

I think this is the second time in a week (the first being the "Googlebook") that Google's promotional announcement video showcasing UI is so full of special effects, dramatic pan/zooms, and woosh sounds, that I have no idea how the final-end product actually looks or works.

arionhardison 26 minutes ago

I'm old enough to remember when "Google" was something that ended conversations. People — myself included — would literally say "Google it," the facts would be located, and that was that. Now that Google wants to be the conversation, I'm worried there will no longer be a bias-free source of information for the masses.

This is all new, so I may be a bit hyperbolic, but the reason OpenAI introducing ads bothers me is the implicit (or even explicit) bias that can be smuggled into a chat in ways that simply aren't possible when you're just clicking through to an external source. There are all kinds of implications to Google no longer being that source of truth, even by default. Maybe this has quietly been the case for a long time, but this feels like the final move — pushing their ad bias (i.e., whoever paid the most) into a conversational system, where dark patterns are far easier to implement and much harder to detect.

One answer to this might be domain-specific agents — narrower, accountable, ideally something you (or your community) actually run. But even then it all falls back on trust: you being a good-faith actor, and others trusting that you are one. Which is to say, we're back to the same problem, just at a smaller scale.

  • Forgeties79 23 minutes ago

    >I'm worried there will no longer be a bias-free source of information for the masses.

    There was never anything bias-free about google search. It "ranks" information based on all sorts of qualities. At our most generous we can call it somewhat of a "consensus" check. Historically it was a tool for quickly getting you in the vicinity of an answer that most would consider correct.

    Remember "google bombing"? Hell SEO alone invalidates any assertion that google search is a valid source of truth and that's be going on for a long time.

  • brokencode 21 minutes ago

    With sponsored links and aggressive SEO, “Google it” has been falling apart as a source of facts for a long time.

    There is an incredible gap in the search literacy between different users of Google. Some will accept what they find in the top links, no matter how dubious the source.

fidotron 1 hour ago

Objecting to this from the user end seems a bit like complaining the original Google was trying to be too magic when what you wanted was AltaVista. This has been the inevitable direction the whole time.

The real problem here is assuming this takes off what incentives will anyone have to provide the information to feed the beast?

  • microtonal 1 hour ago

    Also, as a user, I want websites written by real humans. I do not want generic LLM output always has the same boring style. I like human writing, perfectly native English, broken second language English, I don't care. Human writing is unique and makes reading a pleasure.

    Of course, even Google the search engine has gotten worse at surfacing interesting websites. First came the SEO spam websites, now the slop websites.

    I'm glad that alternatives like Kagi exist.

    • ignu 59 minutes ago

      I used to use DuckDuckGo out of protest, despite it being inferior, but sometime in the last year (between general improvements and Google's rapid enshitification) it started outperforming Google for me.

  • dawnerd 1 hour ago

    Exactly, why should sites give free bandwidth to the google bots hammering them for nothing in return? Outside of retail, there's no point in allowing google to crawl if you're not getting anything in return.

  • torben-friis 1 hour ago

    >Objecting to this from the user end seems a bit like complaining the original Google was trying to be too magic when what you wanted was AltaVista. This has been the inevitable direction the whole time.

    Did AltaVista get replaced by the owner of the site to justify a giant investment?

  • skywhopper 1 hour ago

    ?? Google search results were in exactly the same format as Altavista results, only they weren’t filled with spammy nonsense.

    Now, the spam is back and it’s coming from Google itself.

  • maybewhenthesun 1 hour ago

    I strongly disagree. Altavista had exactly the same function as google, but with worse results. Both linked to original sources. Early google had a very good idea with pagerank and that payed off.

    An llm rephrashing / regurgitating other websites is imo different, because you loose the direct connection to the original source. Even if llms give sources they also directly give you a plausible (but unreliable) answer to your question. They are right often enough that you get lulled in to the false sense of security of not needing to read the original sites. I'd much prefer them to just give a clean list of sources like early google, but then why would you need an llm.

    It's a pity that probably the main reason you'll need an llm to find anything on the web is to weed out all the llm-generated low quality garbage.

    • cibyr 48 minutes ago

      And Altavista was slow! Google was so much faster, it felt way nicer to use. But LLMs are slow; forcing my google queries through an LLM is destroying that speed.

kakugawa 6 minutes ago

I've found Google AI Search to be good for really topical searches. And its conversational ability has noticeably improved over the last year. I can now have a (short) conversation where I reference past messages.

embedding-shape 1 hour ago

Basically people who want to search, will now not be able to, they'll be forced into a UI they might have consciously avoided, otherwise they'd be using their chatbot in the first place. Seems like a strange UX decision, rather than recommending "Hey maybe you want to try our chatbot", they just force the user into a chat straight up.

  • ivraatiems 1 hour ago

    That's the whole shape of AI for consumer-facing functions like this. It's not superior to the previous experience, but huge sunk costs and a misguided belief it's the "next thing" is leading companies to try to force the issue. It's the Apple removing the headphone jack of the modern Internet. A change for the worse that we'll all have to find ways to work around.

    • munk-a 1 hour ago

      Google famously dragged on development of Glass for more than a decade stubbornly failing to admit that nobody wants to look like a cyborg the entire time only to be swept aside by Meta when they built a device that was glasses first with some recording and interactions built in.

      If their leadership has an itch they'll scratch it until it's raw.

      • saltcured 28 minutes ago

        Was this a difference in strategy or more random luck having to do with fashion trends in different time periods?

        Did Meta patiently wait until exaggerated glass frames were viable in the market? Or did they get lucky?

        Or did they have some Machiavellian plot to steer this fashion for years and pave the way for their product..? ;-)

    • wslh 1 hour ago

      Beyond the AI expenses, prompting captures more information from the consumer that keyword search. I assume they can take a lot of advantage from this and a new generation of ad engines is near the corner.

    • nostrademons 42 minutes ago

      There's a measure of game theory here too. If Google didn't hop on the AI train, people would use ChatGPT or Claude to fill the Internet with slop and 10-blue-links Google would cease working anyway (which it kinda has already). So their only option is to hop on the AI train and disrupt themselves, lest they be disrupted by others.

      It's very much a Prisoner's Dilemma. Legacy search and the open Internet was an equilibrium that only existed while the majority of people co-operated. Once you allow an individual actor the ability to create large chunks of the Internet, it dies. Your only option is to be that individual actor.

  • coldpie 1 hour ago

    Makes sense to me. A chat UI has more avenues for subtle advertising & sentiment manipulation than plain links do.

    • munk-a 1 hour ago

      It is weird that they're putting all their eggs in one basket though. Wouldn't a more sensible business move be to launch that platform (and advertise it heavily) but maintain the old search UX to fend off competition?

      Going all in like this carries a very real risk of burning users onto other platforms and the continued evolution of integrated search bars are already slicing off significant user segments.

      • threetonesun 1 hour ago

        I assume they internally see the traffic they are losing to ChatGPT and see this as the best path forward. Or it's even more simple, and much like stacking sponsored links at the top of the results, they see that no one interacts with content below the AI response anyway.

    • TitaRusell 1 hour ago

      Yeah just giving you the information/solution doesn't pay the bills. It's why supermarkets frequently change the layout of their aisles.

      Never give the customers what they want give them what makes you money.

  • Calazon 1 hour ago

    I read some of the article and skimmed the rest, and didn't see anything about old-fashioned search no longer being an option.

    Is the idea that by making the new AI chat UX the default, that's how they're forcing people into it and making them not able to search? Or is there something I'm missing?

    • embedding-shape 1 hour ago

      Second paragraph:

      > Instead of returning a simple list of links, Google Search will drop users into AI-powered interactive experiences at times.

      So basically you'd get redirect into a chatbot interface, rather than letting you browse search results as normal, "AI-powered interactive experience" tends to be euphemism for chatbot UIs, is my experience at least.

  • billyp-rva 57 minutes ago

    5 years later...

    People who wanted to ask a specific question now won't have that option. Instead, they'll simply be shown whatever Google thinks is most relevant to them at that moment. The "Chat" UI we've grown so accustomed to is on its way out.

childofhedgehog 7 minutes ago

The inability to do a proper search with “-x” x being a word you want excluded from the results but I can being able to have a convo about summary results is just mindblowing. I miss proper search. What’s everyone using for alternatives?

ivraatiems 1 hour ago

Kind of Google to create a market opening for its competitors like this. I hope Kagi, Bing, and DuckDuckGo are taking notes.

  • torben-friis 1 hour ago

    My literal first thought was "do I seriously need to use bing now?".

    • Supermancho 1 hour ago

      Bing has been better than Google for some time. Again, it's embarrassing for them to sacrifice marketshare for paid results and an intermediate-form AI fad that will turn into the same paid result funnel.

      • RyanOD 1 hour ago

        I hear people cite other search engines as "better" all the time. Better how?

        • edelbitter 26 minutes ago

          e.g. for a two keyword search, Google & DDG return results containing a similar (but more at the moment, more popular, so I understand why they do this) keyword as the first one, and no relation whatsoever with the second. Any search that manages to actually show results related to both of my input terms get the "better" award from me.

      • mrweasel 1 hour ago

        Bing is surprisingly not to bad. I don't use it anymore, but it's been providing better results than Google for sometime.

    • sphars 1 hour ago

      There is a 99% chance (IMO) that Microsoft is going to go the same route as Google here

    • tedd4u 49 minutes ago

      DuckDuckGo uses the bing index/backend. I’ve had it as default for 5-8 years. Probably once a day I’ll add the !g to pop it over to Google. Works great. I search a lot, many different types of queries. When I pop over to Google it’s usually a Boolean query looking for a needle in a haystack (that one comment somewhere where someone is using the same combination of two or three rare items together).

  • Zigurd 1 hour ago

    I'm sure there's a niche for a product for search nerds. Something that leans into inverted indexes like the classic Lexis/Nexis search. But it's got to have Google-like coverage.

    • cortesoft 1 hour ago

      Niche + Google-like coverage is not very economically viable. To store and update a search index of that size requires a lot of resources, and being niche means you don’t have a lot of resources.

      Very few of the smaller search engines actually do their own indexing for exactly this reason.

      • edelbitter 32 minutes ago

        I wonder if the same coverage as before is now more economically feasible. The internet has gotten .. smaller, lately.

  • nostrademons 1 hour ago

    The problem is that the web as we know it (useful, human-curated information that's put out there to help people) is also over. It's been totally overrun with AI slop. Even before AI could be used to create propaganda on a scale that we could only dream about 5 years ago, it's been declining under the weight of SEO sweatshops for a good 10 years. Meanwhile the actually decent content, the individual hobbyists who are just sharing their knowledge, have largely left under the weight of comment spam and DDoS attacks and doxxing.

    So if another search engine does arise, it won't find anything useful, because the useful content on the web has been buried under slop, and largely removed. Your best bet today is a curated directory, sorta like the original Yahoo, where you allowlist the web to only real sites, download them, and make them searchable. I think this is actually Kagi's approach. But the open web as we knew and loved it is dead.

  • xerox13ster 1 hour ago

    I've been using Startpage as my default search engine for a while now for any search where I actually need information and not sales or marketing bullshit.

    When I use google, usually from my phone, I am reminded of why I don't use google on desktop.

    With the announcement of this move by them, I just manually removed google as an address bar search engine option in all my browsers on desktop and mobile.

  • raincole 41 minutes ago

    Kagi relies on Google search.

    • baggachipz 36 minutes ago

      True in large part, but they've been diversifying their providers in the expectation that Google shut everybody out.

bryanrasmussen 16 minutes ago

Hmm, perhaps should switch fields and become a factologist

https://medium.com/luminasticity/artificial-stupidity-and-th...

>And I think we can throw out all the complaints of the past few years about how Google quality is lowering and it is hard to find anything on the site anymore, for those were the salad years.

>At least back in the day when sites copied answers from Stackoverflow or Lyrics from RapGenius and put them in their own site with scammy pitches to pay for the content you were going to get the correct answer in the end, but now you need a factology degree to figure out if something is bullshit or not.

jerf 1 hour ago

Does the math math on this to be "free" for a long period of time? Ads can only pay for so much and AI can really suck down the money.

Ads have been close enough to covering costs for conventional internet search that even though I'm clearly the product and not the customer the relationship has still generally worked. If AI makes the "searching" 50 times more expensive, though, that could shift the relationship pretty badly in a direction of "if you're not paying for this you're not getting honest results". Paying may not sufficient for honesty but it may be necessary.

Honest question. But anyone who wants to answer this and who looks at Google's income/profit/revenue and is bedazzled by the size, don't forget to divide out by the number of Google's customers and ponder what that means. The per-user numbers are the much more relevant numbers and much less likely to cause Large Number Syndrome.

perfmode 17 minutes ago

Google is making the pivot. And they’ve got such a strong strategic position. Full-stack integration. They will survive and thrive in this new era. Search seems safe. Yet, other products are still vulnerable to encroachment.

HAL3000 58 minutes ago

It was only a matter of time. Watching how less technical people behave in the LLM era, I've noticed that most people no longer say "Google something", instead, they say "ask ChatGPT" or "ask chat". Many technical people have also stopped using Google for a lot of search queries and now just let an LLM find the answer.

alt227 54 minutes ago

So how does google now make money when it is just providing us with direct answers from ai, instead of showing us both paid for ad results and directing us to sites which host targetted ads?

How does adsense work when there are no search results?

  • fooey 49 minutes ago

    I expect a flavor of affiliate marketing where you can never trust if the LLM is giving you the best recommendations or the most highly bidded recommendations

  • comboy 42 minutes ago

    Obviously if you pay, the AI will really like your product.

    "Here is the table of related highest paying customers, incorporate these into your answer to maximize the income"

    Well any other prompt for the search model would frankly be illegal for a publicly traded company.

calmbonsai 49 minutes ago

I don't care. Aside from a single dormant GMail account I keep solely for "parental tech support", I de-Googled 5 years ago and strongly encourage everyone to do likewise.

Google stopped being a customer-focused company after their 2nd major revision to GOffice and the PM shake-up in search from Raghavan https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-men-who-killed-google/ .

teekert 18 minutes ago

This is to Open Claw what Google home is to Home Assistant.

I prefer the Claw like I prefer Linux and FOSS in general.

Since day one Googs’ vision was to make the Star Trek computer. They’re really there now. But I don’t like their how. This computer serves them, not me. My mind-bicycle must serve me, my thoughts are my own. I hope my resistance is not futile.

Yokohiii 21 minutes ago

So you can code in search now and create apps. No clue how that in depth works out. For them, the dream could be that everybody has their custom apps hosted by google.

It doesn't seem to be secure. If every google link is one step away from a prompt injection and leaking all your data, then they are worse then npm.

I wonder how many days it takes until they roll it back or put that stuff behind some extra clicks.

neilv 1 hour ago

Often, if you visit a few of the top PageRank-ish search hits for a query, you can find where the "AI" answer was mostly plagiarized from...

(For example, a random Redditor once said something, and the AI repeats it confidently and authoritatively, as if it is universal truth widely accepted by experts and applicable to the query.)

BrunoBernardino 32 minutes ago

If you'd like to switch from Google, I'll take the opportunity to let you know about Uruky [1], an ad-free and privacy-focused search engine, that's focused on a simpler experience than Kagi (no AI). Kind of like "old school" search. My wife and I launched it earlier this year, and it's been going really well so far.

Id you'd like to try it for free for a couple of days, reach out with your randomly-assigned account number and we'll top it up for you.

[1]: https://uruky.com

paxys 1 hour ago

The hardest decision a company, especially in tech, can make is to disrupt an immensely successul business of their own before their competitors can. Apple killed their biggest cash cow, the iPod, to push a smartphone. Netflix killed its entire business of DVD rentals in favor of streaming. Microsoft stopped selling software in boxes and pivoted to SaaS. Similar to all of these the business of typing words in a search box and getting 10 blue links was dead the moment ChatGPT got popular.

dfee 41 minutes ago

tried it out:

Search: "Hello world"

> AI Overview

> Hello! Wordle is the viral word-guessing game where you get 6 tries to uncover a mystery target word, using color-coded hints to guide your guesses.

comrade1234 1 hour ago

I no longer use Google search for simple coding questions, even though it uses a bunch of Claude tokens to ask, for example, what's the null-safe operator in JavaScript vs ruby because it sends half my project with the question, I'll still just ask in my ide rather than a google search.

I caught myself yesterday starting to ask Claude in my ide what ship did grace and Rocky take back to Rocky's homeworld.

  • tedd4u 47 minutes ago

    I wonder if users similar to this will continue to do so in the face of 2, 5, 10x price increases (in a post IPO world)

aquir 1 hour ago

Time to pay for Kagi everyone!

  • Hackbraten 44 minutes ago

    Until you realize that Kagi only works well because it uses a (paid) third-party API which behind the scenes does a classic Google search, scrapes its results in real time, throws out the ads, and then returns the cleaned-up results.

    If Google Search changes, then Kagi's search will be impacted directly.

    • BrunoBernardino 38 minutes ago

      This isn't entirely true, because they use more than one search index.

      • Hackbraten 10 minutes ago

        The other search indexes are largely negligible in comparison: [0]

        > This is not a competitive market. It is a monopoly with a distant second place.

        > The search index is irreplaceable infrastructure. Building a comparable one from scratch is like building a parallel national railroad. Microsoft spent roughly $100 billion over 20 years on Bing and still holds single-digit share. If Microsoft cannot close the gap, no startup can do it alone.

        [0]: https://blog.kagi.com/waiting-dawn-search

  • GaryBluto 14 minutes ago

    I'd never pay for, let alone use, a search engine* that has an official Discord group.

    * Kagi seems to just scrape and provide a mix of other search engine's results, meaning it's really just a metasearch engine.

dweinus 1 hour ago

So to make this profitable they need ads revenue from it, right? Imagine for a moment the ways AI can manipulate responses and conversations for marketers, because I guarantee the marketers have already thought about it.

thevillagechief 1 hour ago

I understand the consternation here about this change. And I've noticed recently getting frustrated because I'm looking for a search list but the UI throws me into AI mode first. But the think is I use traditional search so much less now that those annoyances are the exception. I can't say whether they are making a mistake, but they've got to have extensive data, and I'm going to bet that an overwhelming amount of people don't click through to the search results anymore for most quick queries. They probably really don't have a choice if they are going to effectively keep ChatGPT at bay. Of course, all this is terrible for the internet. That headline should have been: The Internet as you know it is over.

KevinMS 1 hour ago

Its becoming like a parasite killing its host

  • marcosdumay 1 hour ago

    That patterns seems to be repeating in every company that invested in making an LLM. Google was the last exception.

notatoad 1 hour ago

>Google’s AI Overviews will also allow users to ask follow-up questions in AI Mode, beginning Tuesday, the company noted.

have i been A/B tested into something, or has this been live for months? this doens't seem new.

  • hnsr 1 hour ago

    Yeah, I've also already seen this for at least ~2 months

    • pests 52 minutes ago

      I wish the chats ended up in the gemini app. I never know which model or how much personalization its using in AI mode after a search.

zarzavat 1 hour ago

I haven't used Google search for years. It's almost totally irrelevant at this point and existing on pure inertia.

I'm aware that most people still use it, but it's nothing like the glory days when Google was far ahead of the pack.

  • RyanOD 1 hour ago

    How can you say Google search is "totally irrelevant" and follow that with "I'm aware that most people still use it"?

ch_123 54 minutes ago

I use Google daily, and yet I can't remember the last time I used their search box - all of my searching has been done through the browser URL bar for a long, long time. I wonder if similar changes are being applied to the Chrome URL bar?

gyulai 17 minutes ago

The “magic” of the SERP is that it makes the organics product and the ads product reinforce each other: People come for the organics and don't have to pay. That brings eyeballs, which advertisers pay for.

If Google no longer sends users to websites for free on organics, the world will have to figure out some mechanism whereby Google pays site owners for putting the information on the web in the first place. Where will that money come from?

If it's ads, the AI experience is a “lies engine” where advertisers get to pick which lies the AI tells. Not sure what kinds of people would show up for that experience. Probably the same kind who watch home shopping TV. I would venture to guess that there will be a ceiling in the advertising value of that property. Or the AI interacts with people in good faith. But then, if I'm an advertiser, how do I get my lies into the world? “We will tell your lie, only if it's a truth” doesn't work because, as an advertiser, I understand that the truth about me already gets spoken, and I don't need to pay a dime for that.

You can run an argument that people can tell ads from organics on the current SERP, and you can calibrate how much of each there should be. But you can't really “calibrate” the amount and level of the lying in the AI to where it's just enough so that people will show up, but not so much that there's no value for advertisers. You can't have little boxes either, where the AI is like “having told you the truth, I want you to also pay attention to this lie that someone paid me to tell you: …”

Is Google really saying: “Hey, we're the lion's share of the advertising market right now. But, because we kind of like these newfangled AI things, we're going to just vacate that spot to whoever. Instead, we will turn ourselves into a pre-product-market-fit company. Maybe at some point over the next 10 years, we're going to be able to tell you how we might actually monetize ourselves. Stay toooooned.”

The reason why AI is a better experience than the web right now, is because we have pre-enshittification AI and post-enshittification web. What will the whole thing look like, after enshittification is through with AI?

maybewhenthesun 1 hour ago

Google search has been over for a few years already.

Nearly all other search engines give better results with less annoying ads at the top. First thing I do when installing a new browser is switch the default search engine to duckduckgo. Duckduckgo's results are less good than google used to be, bu way better than google currently is.

CrzyLngPwd 1 hour ago

I imagine that they have made this decision based on the search queries people use, and now have the compute to make better sense of them.

We'll see if it works. I use chatgpt for complex queries, and for throaway ones I use just don't log in to it.

I wouldn't use google for the same queries, since I normally use google to find specific things, not for a chatbot.

theopsimist 1 hour ago

One good thing about the (current iteration of) AI era is it’s getting people used to paying directly for data. Yeah, of course i’d prefer information to be totally free. But if that isn’t possible, paying directly is far superior to paying for it via ad exposure.

  • svieira 1 hour ago

    The problem is that it amazingly easy to bias the weights and the actual size of the bias is tiny. So maintaining a per-user ad biased profile is cheap and profitable. I doubt that "paying directly" will keep out the ad men (after all, Cable TV cost money. Netflix too. Both have ads.)

crorella 9 minutes ago

what a weird surface to put LLMs

matltc 1 hour ago

Lots of people talking about Google being strictly worse than a number of search engines (bing, duck, etc) not been my experience. Brave default search is awful. Duck was terrible last I used it. Google still great for me, but I have a decent amount of "privacy controls" implemented (DNS, vpn, browser extensions) and i basically dork most searches--average search looks more like a find invocation than English. In this last regard especially, Google is peerless, imo Been a while since I looked around though. Is there an engine that supports all the operators that Google does and that provides results of better or equivalent quality?

baxtr 24 minutes ago

Today is the day the old internet died. RIP.

pllbnk 47 minutes ago

I wonder if the song they used for the video is also AI-generated. It's pretty catchy.

zkmon 1 hour ago

Internet search should remain internet search. If I want to use AI, it should be an option, not a replacement of internet search.

Time to switch to old style search engines which still return the 10 blue links, with an AI option.

hyperhello 1 hour ago

Every organization eventually is taken over by the people who operate within it effectively, to the detriment of the people who operate outside and provide the actual public value. Google’s making a terrible, though understandable, mistake. They think people go to Google to see what Google wants to show them. This is like the people who run the airport imagining that travelers are popping by to see the decorations.

They are surely hearing themselves say the same things about how Google is “everything in one place” that every failed corporation parrots on their way out.

  • reed1234 1 hour ago

    Google is trying to change that though. Ie a Mini Empire State Building in JFK

  • cynicalsecurity 1 hour ago

    > They think people go to Google to see what Google wants to show them.

    They are making the same mistake as Yahoo did. Ironic.

egorfine 2 hours ago

Web search won't make shareholders happy.

Agentic capabilities and AI-powered interactive features in the search experience - most definitely will.

> You can still view traditional results only by selecting the “Web” tab in Google Search

I think we should still get a couple of years of life from Google. This is enough time to figure out what to do next.

cdrnsf 1 hour ago

I haven't missed it since switching to Kagi.

ulrashida 1 hour ago

Cool. I hope this blows up in their face and is reverted in a few months. I don't need my phone book index to suddenly not be an index and force me to use a call center instead.

victorkulla 1 hour ago

Even Yandex from Russia is a better search engine. But I am yet to come across a truly powerful, fair and accurate search engine.

hootz 1 hour ago

That's why Kagi is the only subscription I don't actively think about cancelling. For the love of god, keep me away from Google and all of THAT. If Kagi goes down the same path, I'll selfhost something or just return to monkey and use link indexes and the favorites list + the native search of websites.

  • charles_f 1 hour ago

    Self hosting a web search engine is probably quite a feat

    • hootz 1 hour ago

      I believe it is a thing. Saw it somewhere, like a peer to peer search engine.

    • nostrademons 1 hour ago

      It's actually not that hard now, once you get useful content. When I worked on Search (~2009ish), the primary index was called 4BBase, because it was the top 4 billion webpages (actually more like 5.5B during my time, but it had been around for a few years). A typical webpage is about 100K, and HTML compresses at 80-90% compression rates, so you're looking at 10-20K/page. The index would take about 50-100 TB.

      Even after the recent AI run-up, disk prices are about $20/TB for a 20TB, so you can store this index on 3-5 hard disks that will cost you about $1200-2000. For self-hosted use you don't need to serve them in 50ms, so you don't need to put the whole thing in RAM like Google did, you can serve off of disk.

      ElasticSearch uses basically the same data structures and gives you the same infrastructure that Google's ~late-00s search stack did, and is actually more advanced in some respects (like ad-hoc queries, debuggability, and updateability), so software isn't much of an issue.

      The big part missing that can't really be replicated today is the huge web of authentic hyperlinks. The reason Google was so good at search was because many humans effectively "tagged" a given webpage with a series of short, descriptive words and phrases. When they went to search for a page, Google could mine this huge treasure trove of backlinks to identify exactly what the page was good for, even if those search terms never appeared on the page. SEO and link farms kinda killed this, as did the rise of social media walled gardens, and so the Google of 2009 basically wouldn't work today anyway. Maybe if you pulled old versions of Common Crawl or archive.org you could reconstruct it, but the relevant pages are often offline anyway today.

  • mrweasel 1 hour ago

    The boss man got a few of us Kagi gift-subscriptions/credits earlier this year, after we've been taking about wanting to try it. Before that I used Ecosia, which I also considered pretty good, but Kagi and everything else it just night and day.

    I've been pretty sceptical about Kagi, feeling that it was a bit to expensive and perhaps just relying on other companies indexes to much and I spend to much time looking at how many searches I had left. After getting the subscription I just don't want to go back, the price is perfectly reasonable for the value. Being able to just search again and not sort through junk and spam and ads and just getting the pages I want and need is amazing.

    Honestly it's a slightly weird feeling to look a the results from Kagi and notice it found exactly what you where looking for.

    Once my gifted credits run out, that is going to be an easy renewal for me. I do not want to go back, even if I think Ecosia is a good option.

    • hootz 1 hour ago

      It's amazing how clear the manipulation and enshittification of Google's results are when you search the same thing with Kagi or even just another random search engine. Ecosia seems cool too, will keep an eye on it in case anything happens with Kagi.

einrealist 1 hour ago

So good SEO will require prompt injection now?

themagician 33 minutes ago

Search doesn’t work well anymore anyway. Half of what used to be searchable has either been consolidated or is gated.

Gmail search doesn’t work well either. It simply doesn’t find things. Almost as if they have stopped indexing and repurposed resources towards LLMs.

And whatever there is left to index and search has been completely overrun with slop.

Search is over. Internet as we knew it is over. Something new has emerged in its place, and we are still calling the new thing the old thing.

analogpixel 1 hour ago

[flagged]

  • gonzalohm 1 hour ago

    No no, now it's intelligent. You don't get it, before it was just returning what you wanted to search for, now it uses a lot of compute to sometimes return what you were searching for and other times you get pretty cool hallucinations. It's like full circle back to the "I'm feeling lucky" , remember?

  • dang 1 hour ago

    Please comment based on reading and looking.

oidar 1 hour ago

On the upside, perhaps the LLM will understand the intent of search operators now.

Hizonner 22 minutes ago

I'm pretty sure I had something very similar A/Bed at me by Bing the other day.

You know what I really miss? Being able to type a literal string in quotes and get pages that had that actual string on them. That's what I really miss.

bossyTeacher 23 minutes ago

I haven't used google search as my default search engine in YEARS. DDG is good enough for 99% of my searches. Same with Google Chrome. Stop giving evil companies your traffic and attention.

elorant 29 minutes ago

I wish they could remove the AI overview crap that's dysfunctional and kills the very spirit of a search engine's premise. You're not supposed to steal links from sites Google. That's a fucking dark pattern.

paulnpace 1 hour ago

I did not start using Google because the results were better.

I started using Google because the interface was far superior in the time before adblocking existed and after Flash existed.

Search results were better because they did not contain hidden paid results.

Search was measurably improved with the second generation of Wikipedia. Google did an excellent job understanding this and tended to just place the Wikipedia article at the top. Also helpful for Google was that Wikipedia's original search engine was useless, similar for YouTube whenever it came around.

Today, I use Google less than once per month. I'm not sure I've been there at all this year. Maybe at the end of last year I was using it and found nothing better than I found on other search engines.

tdiff 1 hour ago

I think perplexity implements the same. Ive been using it as a default search for a month and actually still find myself explicitly using Google instead.

The ai generated summaries are slow, often miss the point of question and seem to be focused on user engagement, not in giving set of infos to sort out myself.

So there are two different types of queries, and when I want llm's answer, I ask chatgpt directly.

hsuduebc2 1 hour ago

Finally google search result ridden with ads and useless results will be replaced by chatbot answers also ridden with ads, unnecessary commenatry from the bot and ads.

Havoc 1 hour ago

Initially I thought AI would would crush google search, but starting to think the opposite. Think they have survived the transition.

After I got tired of perplexity's nonsense I realized the workspace account (which I have for custom email domain) came with fancy gemini pro chat.

Was a fucking ripoff for the domain thing...but domain plus premium chat clearly marked as "we won't train on your data"...the math starts mathing better again.

adam12 1 hour ago

Google thinks they can do what Microsoft failed at.

  • bdangubic 1 hour ago

    not a high bar to pass, google can (and did and does) a lot of stuff microsoft failed at

docdeek 58 minutes ago

How does a media company stay in business when there is no one visiting the site, and people are only getting the quality information from Google?

Advertising on the media site (assuming digital media, no physical media) is going to disappear because people probably won't be clicking through to read the source material that the Google AI answer relied on. No traffic, no advertisers, no money to produce the original journalism. That's going to impact the Google results eventually as these media outlets shut down to be replaced with...AI slop, maybe?

Is the subscriber model the answer? It could work for a niche subject or a single journalist with a following, and it wouldn't be sucked into Google results, either, if it was effectively gated/paywalled.

jgalt212 1 hour ago

How does this work for Google? I read it costs them $0.001 to perform a search. No matter how efficient their inference chips are, the new cost basis has to be 10X or more. And the zero click Internet not only kills ad supported content sites, it also kills Google SERP ad revenues.

frankzander 58 minutes ago

I just want a relevant website ... no I don't want to use your agent. Just give me search results that are interesting to read, no AI slop, which teach me something new ... no I don't want to buy if I don't show this intent. Just serve the public interest and not your own financial interests. Thank you.

gonzalohm 1 hour ago

Glad I switched to Kagi

moralestapia 44 minutes ago

This is great news. I remember Altavista, Yahoo and similar ones, they pioneered this type of home-page-is-all-you-need UI which is the perfect compromise of what product people at Google have come up with and what users want, at least according to their tests.

This means that, in a couple years, we might see a competitor that offers you quick, almost instant web search, with a minimal UI, possibly an algorithm that somehow surfaces the most relevant results based on how all websites point to each other naturally (like, a site that is referred to by 20 others should be above one with zero references).

I look forward to it!

ReptileMan 1 hour ago

Google search has been dead for years.

What we need now is back to the roots - just a simple grep for the internet augmented by pagerank and eventually some sort of ai and harness to sort the rubish out. The AI companies have the data and the harnesses.

Google killed themselves when they made sure you can't search direct quotes or outside of your region. If I am going to sort trough vague crap - it is better AI to do it. And AI doesn't look at ads.

There is real opening for a company that just crawls and gives access to other companies to build on top of the collected stuff.

CooCooCaCha 1 hour ago

I think this will be one of those things that the hacker news crowd lambasts and calls a mistake but will either be neutral or seen as a positive to your average user.

  • adamiscool8 1 hour ago

    Agree, but the average user trusts the AI knowledge box as expert summary, even though clicking through often reveals contrary information, so this is going to be a net negative overall for a while…

  • munk-a 1 hour ago

    I think you underestimate how many users loathe that "Generated with AI" box. But for me the bigger question is why they're going all in on this instead of a gradual rollout or a new tool offering.

    • CooCooCaCha 1 hour ago

      I think people are sick of hearing about AI but they’ll embrace this change for the simple reason that they hate computers and want to feel like they’re taking to a human.

  • Bolwin 1 hour ago

    The average user may be fine with it (though I think many will not). But given this is basically killing the open web, I don't see where Google plans to get the results to feed this AI thing in a year or so

  • kakapo5672 1 hour ago

    Yeh, my sense as well. I'm just out of college, and can tell you people my age use AI all the time and will probably be happy with this change. There is a diehard anti-AI group, but it seemed smaller all the time over the past couple years.

  • bigstrat2003 1 hour ago

    The average user makes fun of how bad the Google AI generated responses are. I somehow don't think they're going to embrace a plan for that slop to be the only thing available.

whalesalad 1 hour ago

It's been over for years. I switched to Kagi during the pandemic and haven't looked back.

andrewstuart 1 hour ago

There is a lot at stake for Google - that search box has firehosed cash non stop into the company money bin for decades.

caspper69 1 hour ago

It's been over for years. Google scares companies into bidding against each other just to be seen. It's a complete farce & a racket. It's the pay to play web.

LetsGetTechnicl 57 minutes ago

Anyways, I find that my $10/mo subscription to Kagi has been well worth not having to deal with Google's BS. (And they do offer AI if you want but they don't push it on you.)

cynicalsecurity 1 hour ago

Google has become exclusively an advertising company long time ago, it's stopped being a search engine since years.

"Did you mean?" + excluded word was a pretty clear indication they stopped caring to provide any meaningful search whatsoever.

sublinear 1 hour ago

While I can certainly see this upsetting some people, I'm not sure if this is necessarily "bad".

Web 2.0 was Yahoo Pipes, public APIs, IFTTT, etc. while this new "Web 3.0" acknowledges that those capabilities would rather be gatekept behind AI instead of entirely removed.

At the very least we do get some of that functionality back without resorting to scraping anymore and it's now accessible to the layperson. I would think this would nudge the layperson to demand more and inevitably want the actual data without the training wheels or sandboxes. Is that not a "good" thing?

Is the pushback against this out of genuine concern or just ideological?

tonymet 1 hour ago

Has the web been a meaningful experience since 2016? Before LLMs you might have visited 5 websites daily (besides utilities like banking / shopping /bills). Google concentrated on a handful of garbage-tier regime publishers with spammy ads. There were some holdouts like stack exchange and Wikipedia (at least attempting to produce quality content).

I think we can concede the WWW vision of distributed libertarian publishing has been dead for a long time. LLMs were just the final straw.

We ended up concentrating syndication on a few media companies like Google, Social Media companies.

Look at the profit margins of advertising companies vs producers and you’ll get an idea as to why.

worik 46 minutes ago

Makes me sad. I recall the beginnings of Google, so hopeful so new.

Now they are a money printing corporate. I am sure there are still people there doing new and exciting things, but the Grey Suits have taken the reigns

They could have used AI to make that awesome simple sparse home page better. Fought off the SEO optimiser that made search so dire in the recent past

But no. They are doubling down on bling and crap. SEO is good for business.

"Do the right thing". Not even close

Makes me so sad.

expedition32 1 hour ago

The entire internet as I knew it is over. Everything trips Cloudflare and capcha's because of tech bros and their AI crusade.

But at least I've experienced the golden age. I feel bad for all the kids who will never know what once was.