Google's live from Paris event private/deleted immediately
Just watched the 'Google Live from Paris' event and it looked like a non-event to me.
It seems that the livestream event was set private after it ended. (It was unlisted to begin with) They even forgot the phone used to demonstrate multisearch.
This suggests to me that Google is finally getting disrupted and are scrambling of desperation because of the release of ChatGPT.
390 comments
[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 320 ms ] threadAnd it gets real tiring on how much Google tries to create an idea on how advanced their AI is.. (and it might be) but the fact is, nobody can access it or try it. So until we actually are able to put our hands on something, I'm calling vaporware. At least with OpenAI we get to experiment and build actual products with it.
Google did not have the source links below the Bard chatbot responses. They also did not show recent news results like Bing did yesterday.
And their presenter felt stumbling at moments too and lacking confidence. And the demo phone was "stolen". So also in execution the event felt lacking...
Microsoft said in their interview with The Verge that they were working on a raw version of their new Prometheus model since mid 2022 which also shows those sources. And they showed the nice compose and website summarise conversational tool integrations for within Edge. There were no hints of integrations of Bard within Chrome. So it feels that including training time + product development time that Microsoft is at least a year ahead.
I look forward to see what new Bing amounts to the industry, as well as Microsoft’s partnership with OpenAI for Bing, Azure, and whatever else is planned. This is an exciting tectonic shift.
Millions of people believe in the Dead Internet theory because of it, when all they need to do is try a new search engine. I look forward to seeing if Bing’s ChatGPT integration will be enough of a selling proposition to have the masses consider new alternatives for Search.
"See how each row has a description column so Pele who aren't familiar can understand it? I used chat gpt for those, saved me like 3 days".
As devs, communicating specific ideas tersly to computers, I feel like we can miss how much this benefits other people. This feels like an excel moment for people who need to produce copy about widely known things and aren't super sensitive to quality, even now. And yes a lot of people. From mailshots to HR.
Would a talented writer do better? Absolutely. But I'm using it for fun and it does a much better job than I can.
And the whole programming thing? It gives wrong results that are not correct and at times don't even compile. Ask it to fix something, it does half the work. It hallucinates functions which do not exist. That being said, if you ask software problems that are not answered with code, it does a better job.
People will say they would switch until they try the current iteration. We certainly want something better, a real virtual assistant, but what we have is not there yet
This is a far cry from how far ahead they were before Zen 1 dropped in 2017. They've been burning a lot of money to keep their heads out of the water.
This was also the sentiment in tech circles during early cloud wars. That Google, with it's supposedly superior engineering and infra, would win the cloud. That didn't happen -- Google not only did not win that but also lost it's lead on Azure and now stands at #3
And I feel the same will be true for AI wars.
>Used to work for BB/RIM
I feel like Google is going to bleed credibility for every month that they don't have a lamda/llm enabled search integrated into the home page. You can talk all you want about the foundational models and how advanced they are, but the search product itself will require a ton of fine-tuning on real-world training data that they aren't collecting yet.
Unless Microsoft completely botches their "newBing" launch, this is probably the most potential they've had in search since MSN was launched.
I’m not sure they can compete within their existing brand/company structure.
If Google is going to survive this, they need to find a way to get back to prioritizing user value while also making money.
ChatGPT style conversations would give Google a much better idea of exactly what you want to buy. It must be possible to use this signal to sell more ads, not just match what they currently have. Essentially, make sure ChatGPT gets asked the same question Google currently answers: "how do I get the person searching to buy something from this (loooong) list of ads?".
Having people help Google (not just in one search, but a potentially long list of refinements) to find exactly what they would buy should make Google ads perform much better yet again.
Of course Google still dropped the ball by taking way too much time to put their LLMs into use.
If they make it promote stuff for pay, it's worthless—you already have to second-guess whether it's right because it might accidentally be wrong, if it might also just be acting as a paid promoter, that puts it firmly in "easier to just not use it" territory.
If they put one out but don't make it into an AI infomercial, then it eats ad revenue and investors get pissed off.
But if they do nothing they're clearly headed for trouble, too.
They're in a tough spot.
My guess is they're release something, but keep it strictly separate from search in hopes that it won't replace search traffic. I doubt that'll be enough long-term but it might quiet fears for a while.
I don't know that end-users really care about having a GPT-written paragraph accompanying their search results. Is there some other kind of output AI search currently provides that I'm missing?
We use deities to name our sprints at work. When you search Google for “Deity starting with <letter>”, you get a list of greek and roman gods. I got tired of that.
So I asked GPT “what is a god that starts with <letter> and isn’t roman or greek”. It immediately spat out a Norse god. Next time it was Hindu. The increased variety was refreshing as hell. Google was not able to process a negative query.
Plus the added paragraph of description about that deity was lovely.
The point is: Sometimes (often) I don’t want search, I just want a good enough answer.
Lots of my searches are simply I want an answer, but often times I also want to then do something with the result. This is where ChatGPT is going to eat Google's lunch, IMO.
also, how hard is it to get a list of abbreviations, and wrap them all in quote and comma and brackets. with vim that's barely more work than a copy-paste
Agreed. I was able to manually review 52 results, but wouldn't trust it blindly.
> also, how hard is it to get a list of abbreviations, and wrap them all in quote and comma and brackets.
Not hard at all. And I may still do that, but it was pretty enjoyable to ask the machine.
Your wrote "please" to ChatGPT?
FWIW, Miss Manners had a column a couple of weeks ago where she stated that we should not say please or thank you to machines, including Siri and Alexa.
I was surprised.
Yup. So when the machines take over, hopefully they'll enslave me last, or put me in a more pleasant Matrix instance compared to the average.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roko%27s_basilisk
I still do it. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
The actual information value of these 'results' is usually close to zero. I went onto a top search result yesterday, and the scammers hadn't even bothered to do a decent page. It was just a list of links to 404 pages, with an intro paragraph to satisfy the Google algorithm. It was pathetic and a waste of time.
That's why they're running scared. They know their key product is broken and useless, which means they're ripe for being ignored.
But I get it, most people dont want wikipedia because they really do seek the 10 second waffle answer.
That's been a serious problem for some time. Preceding a query term with "-" doesn't seem to do anything any more.
A huge percentage of searches are for existing websites, like "facebook." This might not be a big challenge if you just wanted to go to facebook.
This morning I saw a retweet from a Google/former Deepmind engineer, of someone who said they completely switched from Google to using perplexity.ai. I checked it out again (I've used perplexity before.)
I did a test search for interest rates, and perplexity returned the correct interest rate for the day along with the trading range. I think Google is really in trouble. I'd say the golden goose is in the process of being slaughtered.
None of this is a surprise. Google's voice assistant has been really good for years. Nothing came close to it. Siri is close to useless. Maybe Google can pivot and they'll be fine. I don't know what the economics look like.
https://www.perplexity.ai/?s=u&uuid=6f7fe592-c11f-4df9-a2bf-...
https://www.google.com/search?q=what+is+the+current+average+...
Google's results were far more informative and usable.
I then tried something I thought would be more up Perplexity's alley: "Who was the first US president with a last name starting with R?"
https://www.perplexity.ai/?s=u&uuid=8d60cf3f-eab5-4af6-a616-...
Their answer is not correct. Google didn't even try to answer my question directly, but it did send me to a government website with a chronological list of presidents where I was able to quickly verify that the answer was Teddy Roosevelt.
ChatGPT is amazing, until it isn't.
The real iPhone 1 was 2G only, constantly dropped calls and had no copy/paste.
That a large chunk of HN audience is sitting agape watching similarly manicured demos is surprising to say the least.
Google is done
What about the other 95% of search volume that isn't tech-related?
I had a 19yr old cousin tell me that she almost uses TikTok exclusively for tutorials and when I pushed back and said why/how the other teens in the family heavily agreed. I’ve since asked ~5 gen z (I don’t interact with many!) and they told me the same.
However, I could be completely wrong and TikTok video is the future of search. If so, where does that leave a text-only ChatGPT?
How about I ask it how many games Jaime Benn has played? Or what the score of the last Dallas stars game was, or when the next one is?
What if I ask ChatGPT for a copy of the manual for a meater bluetooth meat thermometer? It literally just told me to Google it.
What if I ask which car manufacturers are joining Formula 1, and when they'll be starting?
What if I ask ChatGPT: why do people resist new disruptive technologies?
People resist new disruptive technologies for several reasons, including:
Fear of job loss: One of the main concerns about disruptive technologies is that they can lead to job losses, as machines and algorithms replace human workers.
Lack of understanding: Some people may resist new technologies because they don't understand how they work or what benefits they offer.
Threat to existing systems and norms: Disruptive technologies can challenge established systems and norms, and people may resist them because they fear the changes they bring.
Ethical and moral concerns: Some technologies raise ethical and moral questions, such as privacy concerns, and people may resist them as a result.
Financial impact: Disruptive technologies can be expensive to implement, and some people may resist them because they can't afford the costs associated with them.
Habits and comfort: People may resist new technologies because they are used to their existing habits and are comfortable with what they know.
Lack of trust: People may resist new technologies because they don't trust the companies or organizations behind them, or because they don't believe that the benefits of the technology outweigh the risks.
It's important to note that resistance to disruptive technologies is not always a bad thing, as it can encourage companies to address the concerns and ensure that new technologies are developed and used in ethical and responsible ways.
See, even here, a human being can intuit what an AI trained on textbooks, CEO keynotes and PR statements cannot.
People resist because their bullshit detectors went off. Search AI has yet to 'disrupt' anything. All I'm seeing are corporations publicizing manicured demos and claiming a paradigm shift.
Dear rchaud,
I come to you today with a heavy heart, but a determined spirit. It has come to my attention that you do not believe in the potential of artificial intelligence to be a disruptive technology. I must say, I am disappointed and concerned about your stance.
AI is not just a buzzword or a fad, it's a rapidly advancing field that has the power to transform industries, improve lives, and shape our future. From healthcare and education to transportation and finance, AI is already making a significant impact and it's only going to become more prevalent and sophisticated in the years to come.
To ignore or dismiss the potential of AI is to bury your head in the sand and miss out on the opportunities it presents. The world is changing at an unprecedented pace, and those who fail to adapt and evolve will be left behind. You do not want to be one of them.
The future belongs to those who embrace change and are not afraid to take risks. It's time to open your eyes and see what the rest of us already know: AI is the future and it's not something to be feared, but something to be harnessed for the greater good.
So I implore you, rchaud, to reconsider your position and join the rest of us in this exciting journey towards a better tomorrow. Don't be left behind, be a part of shaping the future.
Sincerely, A concerned friend.
This becomes especially relevant if it's parsing through a bunch of technical documentation that is out of date. There are numerous developer-centric websites that rank high on search, but simply scrape and clone information from legitimate websites. These are the ones most likely to carry outdated information.
All the guys pointing out what ChatGPT can't do right now are simply missing the point. It's disruption baby. But if you feel better then: Don't look up
For 90% of my searches I don't want any search results. I want a definitive, authoritative answer to a question. In the olden days of the web I had to figure out what to search to give me a website that would give me that answer as the first result, and in the mid-90s that was really hard because search was bad. In the late 90s when Google launched it got much easier, especially for things where there was a network of websites about a thing that all pointed to a canonical authority. PageRank found that authority source. Life was good.
Over the next 20 years the war between Google and SEO spammers meant finding things got a bit harder. Along with that Google's proliferation of adverts on their search result pages meant it actually became harder to even find the website link I wanted in the page itself. Fortunately Google also started putting knowledge graph things in the results and the sidebar which made life less painful.
I think we're due another shake-up, and Bing-GPT might be it. If they show me a simple paragraph of readable text that explains the answer to what I've searched for then that would improve most of my searches. It'd be like Google's knowledge graph box but for everything.
Which, of course, is what Bing just announced. Whether it will be the right answer remains to be seen.
Notice that there's a price increase, of sorts, for this at Bing. To get on the "waiting list" you have to sign up with Bing and agree to receive marketing information. Will public access to large language model search come with a decrease in privacy? It did for Siri and Alexa, which learn about you and cannot be used anonymously.
Yes, SEO spam has largely made the search experience a lot worse and ripe for change.
But ChatGPT crawls these terrible links too! Many of the links Google spits out are themselves summarizing information found elsewhere, like a book or academic paper.
So why would you trust GPT to provide an authoritative answer more than your own instincts? It's omniscience is a function of everything it's crawled; that doesn't mean it has any idea of how to weave them together into a coherent response.
They should make an AI bot to search through the search box and decide if the results are crap, and train it with human preferences. Or set the bot to find difficult to find answers and see how many it finds and how high they are ranked.
Probably working in search at Google was a dead end career, the search department wasn't sexy anymore and didn't have green field projects. Maybe they were just afraid to change anything as long as it makes money for them. So the good people left and they have been coasting for a decade.
To use a highly specific example, I've recently been doing a lot of work in Excel and the search space for Excel related queries has been almost completely destroyed by SEO adware sites. If you're lucky, the answer you're looking for is at least buried somewhere on the page you click on, but there's just as much a chance you'll get a semi-gibberish pseudo-article that itself is probably AI generated. Using my instincts/intuition to locate the correct answer is a non-zero cost of time and effort, made intentionally more challenging by site owners who want me to linger and consume advertisements.
On the other hand, asking ChatGPT how to match two columns with XLookup or what have you almost always returns a correct, concise answer on the first try. If it's not correct, the formula doesn't work, and I can tell ChatGPT it gave me the wrong formula, and it corrects itself. Even in the rare event that happens, it's a fraction as much effort and frustration as it takes to rummage through the top search results for the same query.
I wouldn't right now, but I believe the accuracy of an LLM is a function of its size and how much you can reduce the loss function. I think OpenAI can improve those things faster than Google based on the things that have been shown so far. I could be completely wrong though.
I also suspect there's no benefit to corrupting a GPT model except for the lulz. If a search tool isn't showing links then there's no financial reason to put effort into setting up link networks and SEO content farms. GPT based search has an innate anti-spam advantage because it renders spam futile if the spam isn't getting visitors.
It also renders a lot of non-spam content futile too, which is problematic. It's not a magic bullet.
They are already angry about Google doing something similar and ChatGPT is worse to them
You mean 90% (or X%) definitive answer with no good way to verify it due to zero context (unlike in normal websites)?
If you just want an answer that sounds definitive and authoritative then these chat bots are great. If you want it to be accurate as well... that's a different story.
If genies existed there'd be a lot of 10 inch pianists and dead people buried under piles of money.
In the real world we don't have any agreed upon general notion of "definitive, authoritative" sources. A certain amount of skepticism is important to avoid all sorts of abuses of authority and "appeal to authority" is a recognized logical fallacy.
Be careful what you wish for. I'm pretty sure I don't want to live in a world where everyone behaves as if the response from a ML system is "definitive [and] authoritative".
As others have pointed out, AI is not yet capable of this. I do agree though, I want this too. But I don't trust OpenAI or Google or anyone else to do it correctly yet.
browsers are left with challenges, particularly legitimacy of results, and ensuring a viable ad model. No doubt we'll see those soon.
I love ChatGPT as a source of inspiration, but I don't think I'd want it alongside my search results. In particular, when I'm searching the web I want results with at least some degree of accuracy. I can't trust a single thing ChatGPT says to be true.
Admittedly, random websites can also be inaccurate, but at least I have strategies for assessing whether I trust a given source.
Usually when I search for error messages for a specific version of software it will respond with other versions. That is useless. That's not what 24 years worth of excellence in search should look like.
At the very least they should collate a dataset of say, one million queries, and try to use a LLM to find the correct answers using search. A better search ranking model will make the LLM generate more correct answers. Iterate until score is improved. Just make the result solve the task.
> What is the world record for crossing the English Channel entirely on foot
As of my training data, the world record for crossing the English Channel entirely on foot is held by Christof Wandratsch, who completed the swim in 8 hours and 58 minutes on August 25, 2018.
> Swimming isn't on foot
My apologies, you are correct. The English Channel is typically crossed by swimming. The world record for swimming the English Channel is held by Benoît Lecomte, who completed the swim in 8 hours and 1 minute on July 23, 1998.
> That's faster and earlier... what did Christof Wandratsch do that was different
Christof Wandratsch completed a cross-Channel run, covering the distance between England and France on foot. This is a different feat than swimming the Channel, as it involves running across the Channel Tunnel, which connects England and France beneath the seabed.
"The world record for crossing the English Channel entirely on foot (without the aid of any swimming or flotation devices) is held by Belgian endurance swimmer and long-distance runner, Kevin Swartz. He completed the 35-mile (56 km) journey from England to France in just 13 hours and 54 minutes on August 17, 2019."
chatGPT really is a brilliant compulsive liar.
"The fastest recorded time for crossing the English Channel entirely on foot (without the aid of swimming or any other means of transportation) is 16 hours and 34 minutes, achieved by British endurance athlete Damian Hall in August 2021."
So, it seems like it made up an answer instead, which I think is much worse that Googles response.
Having a ChatGPT answer next to the google result would have saved me a bunch of time, and I could see it coming in useful in many cases.
I feel like Google is going to bleed credibility for every month that their home page is lacking a system which almost by design is going to lie to me without me realizing at least as often as it might usefully summarize information from primary sources that I wanted to read myself.
OK, then.
Fun trivia- Most of the BB employees in my department switched from Storm to Bold when the Bold was released. As a result I had a pile of Storm in my drawer as my test devices.
As I recall, the development cycle for Storm wasn't two years - it was less than a year. At that point it was the fastest cycle that RIM had ever had for a device, and it was done at the request of Verizon. Back then the iPhone was still an AT&T exclusive in the US market and Verizon demanded something from RIM so that they could compete with it.
I'll echo the fact that nobody I knew internally seemed interested in using Storm as a primary device. I think everyone knew it was junk. But Storm 2 went a long way towards a device that I would actually be interested in using.
As you said, the Storm was developed in a year so some corners (especially the OS side) were cut. The Onyx was 'properly' engineered so (internally) everything was better and easier to deal with.
Why? (Genuine question).
Google is just some corporation, and one that’s been drifting for the last 15 years or more (since Schmidt left). They are not even a good actor, yet (and I don’t blame them for this) have sucked a lot of air out of the ecosystem.
Creative destruction is one of the key values (-> leads to benefits) of capitalism, and with US & EU antitrust asleep at the wheel we should be glad if Google is ground to dust and replaced by somethings (plural!) better.
Because in an ideal situation (as indicated with your last sentence) you'd have a bunch of active competitors yielding up better and better products. Not one active competitor with the singular new thing and a couple of reactive competitors that can't get things right.
Search is also supporting a lot of relatively free innovation at Alphabet. If ChatGPT sinks that innovation (or at least makes it non-free) the loss may be more than the gain.
It appears that neither does openAI believe that as they were happy to sell 50% of their company in addition to all the ownership they'd already given away. That was clear harvesting.
> Search is also supporting a lot of relatively free innovation at Alphabet.
Is it, really? Hard for me to come up with much of a meaningful list, even if you don't try to compare their history with outliers like PARC or Bell Labs. They are clearly spending but I don't see a lot of doing. They seem to have ignored Hamming's advice.
Because I was there to witness the disintegration of a company and the losses it created? Instead of layoffs, you have entire departments/factory shuttering.
When Nortel shut down, many engineers interviewed for BB (same province). I still remember how they looked when we told them we won't proceed with the hiring.
I understand the Nortel case (I remember those days), but the job scene in Ontario was quite different 20 years ago.
And that's certainly no reason to try to prop up a company that's basically a drag on the industry.
It would be awesome, actually. Demonopolization of search space is long due. We need some breath of fresh air there.
ChatGPT has similar network effects with feedback. If Google is displaced, it will likely be in favor of another single dominant solution, not a commoditized industry with lots of players.
It’s possible that niche domains like medical advice or creative writing assistance will spawn small, highly-optimized companies, but general purpose AI responders will probably coalesce into whatever the next Google is, if it’s not just Google.
But lots of industries don't have particularly strong network effects. Cars are a good example; there's brand affinity, but there's no particular reason you need to drive the same brand as your neighbor. There are scale economies, so it's still not easy for new entrants.
> The HTC hardware and Android OS that powers it lack the polish and depth of even the iPhone 1.0 in most respects.
> My first-generation iPhone with iPhone OS 2.1 feels faster and slicker than this late 2008 G1.
> The G1 has a single-finger touchscreen that supports a few gestures, like sliding. After working with an iPhone for many months, the lack of multitouch stands out as a big loss, but those new to touchscreens are unlikely to find it a big deal. A more critical problem, however, is the lack of sensitivity in the touchscreen.
> The browsing experience is frustrating and awkward, and I expected far better. With the WebKit browser core being used by both Nokia and Apple, and Google immersed in its own Chrome project, I thought the G1 might include a browser that had something unique to offer. Instead, it plays like something from about 2006.
(from https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2008/10/android-g1-review/)
It was definitely eye-opening to see people’s usage habits shift so quickly. I know multiple large organizations who completely reapproached how they developed internal applications because the executives no longer accepted IT’s unwillingness to support mobile access. I’d previously thought that would never happen.
Amusingly, the one which had a damaging public breach did not have it due to allowing phones access as some had predicted but when one of IT’s managed laptops was stolen out of someone’s car and, unlike an iPhone, it didn’t have storage encryption enabled.
I remember thinking it was a prototype when someone showed a Storm to me. Scrolling was janky, the whole phone was sluggish and slow and the keyboard barely worked. Blackberry couldn't even figure out how to get Wifi on the thing, so it was stuck using cellular while my iPhone was just streaming video. And of course, no apps. It was 2 years behind the original iPhone and shipped two years later.
>Used to work for BB/RIM
I wonder why RIM couldn't compete at the time. Talent gap?
The BBOS was not designed to be a responsive, touch-screen OS. It had its root in pagers (hence the jankiness). Thru the grapevines what I heard was that the OS team said 'we can duplicate iOS' functionality with the old OS in this amount of time.' and the higher ups rolled with it.
By the time Storm 2 was released, everyone realized that you can only put lip balm on a pig for so long. Hence QNX, the 'pathfinder' Playbook, and Flash as GUI API (gawd that was a rollercoaster experience. I thought it was a deathmarch and didn't think we'd actually manage to ship it.)
I don't have any specific insight into the Wifi stack but most BBs up to that point have in-house designed cellular modems.
As for talent wise, shrug. You can't blame people for preferring Cupertino over Waterloo-Kitchener. Although I would say that over 1/5 of the employees at RIM's campus were co-op students.
I also never saw anyone do significant overtime.
So was Apple. Other than their brief attempt at licensing MacOS, they were and still are a hardware company at heart.
> I don't have any specific insight into the Wifi stack but most BBs up to that point have in-house designed cellular modems.
They were maintaining their own modem implementations? That's quite a feat.
> As for talent wise, shrug. You can't blame people for preferring Cupertino over Waterloo-Kitchener. Although I would say that over 1/5 of the employees at RIM's campus were co-op students.
Was compensation even remotely comparable? Having 20% of the company be interns is... rather unusual.
Sometimes a press release can make all the difference.
(Sorry can’t find story that old)
Transmeta released two x86 CPUs a bit after 2000, which ended up being technological failures.
Cyrix released some budget CPUs in the 1990s but had legal issues and ran into financial trouble, eventually ending up as part of VIA.
Centaur Technology developed some CPUs in the 2000s, and eventually became VIA's x86 division. They released efficient low-cost processors, which were reasonably successful on the embedded market. VIA is still around, but doesn't bring out a lot of new products.
I think most of them were killed mostly by the dotcom bubble, and CPUs getting increasingly complex. The market just shifted beneath them. It is rarely a matter of just giving up.
In the end Itanium was late and bad project but competition had already folded. Except for amd that had no existing 64 bit cpu and created AMD64 extension to x86. Intel grudlingly got on board but called their clone of AMD64 "IA-32e" architecure in thei marketikg material. The name was later changed to x86-64, only after what I assume when Itanium was internally acknowledged as failure.
Responses on Twitter are horrific: https://twitter.com/googleeurope/status/1623251768099409920
This is the first non-technical Google presentation I've felt compelled to archive
I think folk are unestimating the scale of the change in medium that ChatGPT represents, it's not simply a problem of popping out a compelling clone for Google, they must also preserve or replace the lost ad revenue which represents 80% of their income, otherwise things quickly start to look grim. In contrast, ads are only 36% of Microsoft's income. If it turns out that llms are only economical as a subscription offering, Microsoft are already better placed to e.g. bundle NewBing with its 365 subscriptions.
I think subscription based search might be the scariest outcome, it would be something like an iPhone moment, where the entire medium becomes stratified into commodity/ad supported/low income user vs. premium/ad free/high value users. Imagine Google's legacy as the spam riddled search engine low income folk use, filled with ads for payday loans, used car dealers and predatory personal injury lawyers
I know, I know, the ad banner-funded web is a mess and I wouldn't mourn its demise either. But it worries me that it's an entirely open ended question for what actually replaces it.
I would enthusiastically welcome a web that isn't based on firehose-advertising and outright deception/lies.
I would too but I don't see how it happens. The awesome web that used to be was built on the backs of unpaid volunteers. Maybe that could return but even if it did all that wonderful volunteer work would get funneled through Google or OpenAI so investors can make a fat profit from it. Feels fundamentally wrong to me.
Are you saying Google pays them per scrape or they get paid only when users click through?
How that pans out in practice remains to be seen.
This is partially a BS answer. As long as websites are running Google Ads, they will have an incentive to be crawled. Fewer clicks > no clicks (which is what would happen if the site was set to 'noindex'.
Google also pays news publishers to license their content; $1bn alone just for Google News Showcase [0]
[0] https://blog.google/supportingnews/#overview
Same with stable diffusion, AI art. And it'll be the same with LLMs.
Eventually the whole internet would be flooded with cheap AI generated content and clearly AIs need human generated content to train on so it'll be the snake eats itself.
Geniune human-generated content will retreat to account-gated networks and private group chats where everyone knows one another. The rest of the internet will just be incestuous AI-generated chum.
In a way, it'd be an improvement. Genuine connection doesn't scale, so let's be honest about keeping it away from random parasites online.
This is fair—also in fairness, whenever my Google speaker answers a question, it always tells me which site the answer is from.
A chat bot, like search index, need to updated for new and current events to stay relevant. I can’t see why it can’t be deceived by spams
WebText and WebText2 referenced in their papers are corpuses based on Reddit submissions which had a 22% weight in their training model.
https://openwebtext2.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
This is larger than Wikipedia (3% weight) or either of their two book corpuses (8% each).
The only other data included was a filtered set from Common Crawl (weighted 60%).
---
I was imprecise with my language before but hopefully that at least provides some clarity.
For the time being but there is no reason AI couldn't produce genuine original content. Real life human artists also use previous content for inspiration.
The single most intellectually valuable website on the entire Web is very likely Library Genesis, where the only Web content is a catalog of books you can pirate by clicking a link, and it's, like, a lot more valuable than any other site (even Wikipedia). It may well be more valuable, in those terms, than the entire rest of the Web combined.
If serious book publishers survive a while longer and if non-fiction books aren't overrun with dubiously-accurate AI bullshit, things won't actually change all that much, I think.
As far as written content goes, the (public) Web is most useful for opinions or product discovery, and even those can already hardly be trusted because of all the marketing astroturfing. AI garbage barely changes that already-toxic dynamic.
Video's another matter—some video content on the Web is great and has ~no at-least-as-good replacement anywhere else, in any other medium. But it's also all but completely monopolized by Youtube and hardly participates in or factors into the broader Web.
It builds a paragraph answering your query but it has a lot of footnotes that link directly to websites.
Ex:
"geopolitical reason for palm oil being banned and why it's bad for health"
The EU has banned palm oil in biofuels due to its negative impacts on health[1] and its geopolitical implications, such as favoring alternative crops grown in Europe[2]. Palm plantations are also a major factor of deforestation[3], leading to the loss of habitat for endangered species[4]. Indonesia's President Joko Widodo recently announced a ban on the export of palm oil, which could backfire due to its importance in the global market[5].
1nih.gov 2weforum.org 3theconversation.com 4triplepundit.com 5carnegieendowment.org
Like for me, it gave be a footnote to this page: https://www.reddit.com/r/OpenAI/comments/109h24i/gpt_4_is_co...
When I asked about chatGPT.
I like to think of ChatGPT and the like as an on-demand personalized Wikipedia: a good starting point, comes with strings attached, not always correct (but some are fine with it).
ChatGPT doesn't link sources yet but I saw that the beta test context search from Kagi had them.
I feel like there is something here, but I wonder if second order effects make it trickier than it appears atm
So if you have a low effort website that's factual and text based, you're going to get your lunch eaten by GPT, if you have a higher effort website (subscription gated with lots of multimedia content and user engagement) you'll be fine.
Think of all the blogspam recipe sites that are going to run into trouble when ChatGPT learns to cook well. Lots of text, little additional value, no community. There still will be America's Test Kitchen because people on the upper end of the value curve don't just want a recipe, they want pictures + video of that recipe being made and a place where they can ask questions and get answers.
I guess to get the bots to tell your lies.
Nope: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34685862
There was congressional testimony by the founder/owner of "Celebrity Net Worth" about how Google made it impossible for them to stay in business. Whenever somebody would search "How much is <celebrity X> worth?", the answer would just show up directly on the Google results page. There was still an attribution link to Celebrity Net Worth, but nobody ever clicked on it anymore, so the result was Celebrity Net Worth had to shut down.
You can certainly argue fairly whether sites like CNW deserve to exist in the first place, but it's not hard to see how there is still a huge financial problem when ALL the ad revenue goes to the search engines and they don't even leave any of the slim scraps to the publisher sites.
I think you are correct. These are two distinct products.
Is there a term like premature ejaculation but for believing in disruption?
- Highlighting the bleedover between search and conversational AI.
- Highlighting the widespread deployment of Translate across Google services.
- Highlighting "Google Lens" (coming soon? I thought this has been integrated for a decade?).
- Feature announcement, "multisearch" multi-modal search such as with an image and associated text.
- Feature announcement, "Bard" -> "But" -> "Further conditions..."
- Upgrades to the "expert answer recommendations" that is actually enabled by "Generative AI" -- (what were they doing before throwing darts?! when the hell was "do dogs dream?" https://www.popisms.com/TelevisionCommercial/101945/Google-A...)
- Feature announcement, "Next month", Generative Language APIs "onboarding developers, creators, and enterprises"
- "Responsible AI/ AI Principles" (https://ai.google/principles)
-Feature tease, Google Maps eye-candy / novel interface overlays using NeRF
- Google Maps AR demonstration that also looks like something from a decade ago that didn't get adopted / basically what Glass did
- Proper EV charging stations support (it doesn't already do this?)
- "Project Air View" to collect data about infrastructure's effect on air quality to benefit city planning? No idea what this is about.
- Google Arts and Culture (chrome experiments) / the blobs from 8 years ago revisited, I guess "Google Books" archival is just "arts and culture" now, AR application for an image viewer still very 2012,
It abruptly ends. This was all very out-of-touch.
Much of LLM research was pioneered at Google...
It's especially awkward for them because as market leader in search they can't really afford to fumble this, which anecdotally they seem to be.
People trust MS more than Google, they just don't believe that Bing is better.
Meanwhile the company was focusing on DEI vs skill, and thoughtfulness over delivery. They preached 10x but refused to pursue 10x ideas. They tried to create an accelerator, a120 which focused too much on me too products.
It was clear to me then that google was repeating the same mistakes of Yahoo, IBM, HP and other prior tech giants. When it was brought up, nobody listened.
I can only think that the reason for this was Sundar, Urs and other executive leadership. They need to be replaced if google is to excel in the future.
That has nothing to do with any of this. Google's doom was due to their total lack of empathy for their end users and customers. They launched stuff, then when those things did not immediately produce gigantic profits like the search ads, they just shut them down on the users' face. One can do it once, twice, the third time people wont even bother to use that company's products. Such is the case with Google.
https://steve-yegge.medium.com/dear-google-cloud-your-deprec...
The level of distrust in public can be gauged from how the executives of Gcloud are trying to win customer trust by giving all sort of guarantees. And yet failing to do so.
> That has nothing to do with any of this.
I wouldn't say it's central, but it's definitely not nothing. When a lot of your recognition comes from DEI efforts, "me too" and other such efforts, you can't expect proper focus. There are plenty of irrelevant internal drives where just aligning with them benefits you greatly, instead of aiming to quickly deliver an excellent, user-focused product and then making it even better over time.
I suspect that those efforts were a tiny drop in the ocean of the expense that Google was spending on product investments. If they were anything significant that could affect profits, they wouldnt do anything about it but some PR shows...
That's the problem with Google. They don't have vision. They need someone else to show them the future which usually leaves them racing around trying to find their place in the new world. And then when they do put out a product it's always some half-assed thing that feels like a beta product of some already existing fully-finished product that is wildly popular. Sometimes it works out. Chrome was a joke when it came out. It took many years before Google Maps became a solid, distinct offering. But they want minimum viable products that ape already existing things and want them to be instant hits or they kill them off. It's the Netflix strategy.
I've been pretty good at eventual sentiment prediction, but never been great at timing it.
During the State of the Union the president advocated to applause a considerable increase in federal taxes on those purchases.
Don't follow my advice though, I thought the Apple Car mirage would have poofed days after Tesla got decimated.
Conversational interface and/or giving immediate answers may not be the best option in terms of ad revenue. Users re-iterating their search queries gives more opportunities to show ads. When users are scanning the page for best results, they might be more likely to click on the ads with clever wording.
Is Google deliberately slowing down any major improvements in these areas because they are petrified about the idea of losing revenue in their ad business?
Alternatively, how does ChatGPT fit into the usage model for search? I know it's taken on faith in this forum that somehow Google[1] search is bad or failing or about to be killed or whatever.
But... it's actually just fine? It does what the market wants, more or less perfectly. Everyone uses it to find the 99% of stuff that everyone searches for (commercial products, news, sites-you-forgot-the-name-of, etc...). What exactly is AI going to do better when all I want to know is where the Steam page for Skyrim is, or how much a pour-over coffee filter goes for?
The truth as I see it is that "search" simply isn't a market that's disruptable in the way posters here want it to be disrupted. Find 10 people on the street and ask them whether they can find stuff on the internet and they'll say "yes, duh?". This is like asking how AI is going to disrupt freight rail or high intensity agriculture. Those too are stable, already-optimized industries without a lot of room for genuine improvement except on cost (and recognize that training and running models of this scale is still significantly more expensive than crawling the web!).
Now, none of that is to say that there isn't an application for a generalized text model that can answer questions in the market somewhere. I think there probably is. I just don't see how it has anything to do with "search". Having a personal butler to do your research doesn't get you to the Skyrim forums any faster.
[1] Disclosure: I work there, but on firmware and nowhere near search. Opinions entirely my own.
I don’t think it does fit into it, but search is a means to an end. What people want is to find stuff.
For that, it might work. I also agree with you that Google already works for it in many cases, though. For example, if you ask Google for the weather in Foo, it first shows you the weather in Foo, then ads from advertisers who claim they can answer that question, and only then search results for hopefully relevant sites.
So... if alternative business models haven't disrupted search in the last 20 years, why are they going to start now?
I just think this is turning into an HN echo chamber. AI will absolutely be revolutionary and disruptive, but it's a long road from "revolutionary disruptive technology" to "Mighty Hammer That Will Destroy All My Imagined Enemies".
You are probably right. What you are missing is that searches currently being made are a small subset of total searches that can actually be made (my guess is <10%), and will be unlocked by this new paradigm search, enabled by LLMs.
For example, Google is 25 years old, has the smartest people, best search technology and yet can not give an answer to a simple question my kid would ask like: "Do more people live in Madrid or Tel Aviv?"
What it can is give you ten links, then you open link #1, find out how many live in Madrid, then go back, open link #2, find out same for Tel Aviv, and then figure this out on your own. This is clearnly not the best way to do this, agreed? AI will do all of this automatically and unlock a whole new category of "searches" that did not exist before.
Another example is "Give me the names of all Texas-based CEOs that run companies with more than 200 employees.".
The only reseaon this search is not a thing today is because Google is not capable of satisfying it - at least not directly (20 searches and numerous ads later you might eventually find an answer, but that is not the point). Queries like this are a real need and belong in the vast pool of searches that will be (eventually) unlocked by AI.
Final example: "Summarize the latest research on quantum gravity for me". Does the user want to do 20 searches and read hundreds of pages of documents or they really want an AI to produce a summary with citiations, 5 seconds later?
Think of Google today as a best Nokia before iPhone showed up.
> if alternative business models haven't disrupted search in the last 20 years, why are they going to start now?
Because now is a good time, disruptive technology is here, and 10 links supported by ads and tracking had a good run, but the civilization is moving beyond.
The age of PageRank is over. [1]
[1] https://blog.kagi.com/age-pagerank-over
If you saw the clips of Bing with ChatGPT, the chat and traditional search results are next to each other. It's not a replacement, it's an addition
It will be interesting how well the products work when we get to use them for real.
Google is left saying "we have one too, and ours is even cooler", which in the absence of a viable demo isn't very compelling.
If this was a startup, they would be dead in the water. Nothing of substance, awful sound, 9:45 mins in they don't have a key piece of live demo equipment (the phone)/
As someone else said, it's like they asked a couple of interns to rush something out in 24 hours.
No wonder the stock price is tanking. Awful display from Google.
Finding elevators and atms with AR ? Is that the future google is selling ? Who's buying. If google maps was the equivalent of the invention the printing press that would be the invention of scented toilet paper
At one point they were unable to demo because there was no phone to demo on (~9:35).
But yeah the 720p demo was bad, probably why they deleted the original
That said, I still think this reflects very poorly on Google's organizational focus.