Google's search engine's latest AI injection will answer voiced
questions about video and photos
Send a link to a friend
[October 04, 2024]
By MICHAEL LIEDTKE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Google is injecting its search engine with more
artificial intelligence that will enable people to voice questions about
images and occasionally organize an entire page of results, despite the
technology's past misadventures with misleading information.
The latest changes announced Thursday herald the next step in an
AI-driven makeover that Google launched in mid-May when it began
responding to some queries with summaries written by the technology at
the top of its influential results page. Those summaries, dubbed AI
Overviews, raised fears among publishers that fewer people would click
on search links to their websites and undercut the traffic needed to
sell digital ads that help finance their operations.
Google is addressing some of those ongoing worries by inserting even
more links to other websites within the AI Overviews, which already have
been reducing the visits to general news publishers such as The New York
Times and technology review specialists such as TomsGuide.com, according
to an analysis released last month by search traffic specialist
BrightEdge.
The same study found the citations within AI Overviews are driving more
traffic to highly specialized sites such as Bloomberg.com and the
National Institute of Health.
Google's decision to pump even more AI into the search engine that
remains the crown jewel of its $2 trillion empire leaves little doubt
that the Mountain View, California, company is tethering its future to a
technology propelling the biggest industry shift since Apple unveiled
the first iPhone 17 years ago.
The next phase of Google's AI evolution builds upon its 7-year-old Lens
feature that processes queries about objects in a picture. The Lens
option is now generates more than 20 billion queries per month, and is
particularly popular among users from 18 to 24 years old. That's a
younger demographic that Google is trying to cultivate as it faces
competition from AI alternatives powered by ChatGPT and Perplexity that
are positioning themselves as answer engines.
[to top of second column]
|
A sign is shown on a Google building at their campus in Mountain
View, Calif., on Sept. 24, 2019. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)
Now, people will be able to use Lens to ask a question in English
about something they are viewing through a camera lens as if they
were talking about it with a friend and get search results. Users
signed up for tests of the new voice-activated search features in
Google Labs will also be able to take video of moving objects, such
as fish swimming around aquarium, while posing a conversational
question and be presented an answer through an AI Overview.
The whole goal is can we make search simpler to use for people,
more effortless to use and make it more available so people can
search any way, anywhere they are, said Rajan Patel, Google's vice
president of search engineering and a co-founder of the Lens
feature.
Although advances in AI offer the potential of making search more
convenient, the technology also sometimes spits out bad information
a risk that threatens to damage the credibility of Google's search
engine if the inaccuracies become too frequent. Google has already
had some embarrassing episodes with its AI Overviews, including
advising people to put glue on pizza and to eat rocks. The company
blamed those missteps on data voids and online troublemakers
deliberately trying to steer its AI technology in a wrong direction.
Google is now so confident that it has fixed some of its AI's blind
spots that it will rely on the technology to decide what types of
information to feature on the results page. Despite its previous bad
culinary advice about pizza and rocks, AI will initially be used for
the presentation of the results for queries in English about recipes
and meal ideas entered on mobile devices. The AI-organized results
are supposed to be broken down into different groups of clusters
consisting of photos, videos and articles about the subject.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |