Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin
Google devising radical search changes to beat back A.I. rivals (nytimes.com)
95 points by thm on April 16, 2023 | hide | past | favorite | 134 comments


How about Google focus on actually making their search results good again.

I have gotten increasingly frustrated with the results that even 6 years ago were more relevant.

When I put quotes around a specific phrase, I only want direct matches to those words first, before showing me anything else.

Yesterday an uncle was asking me if there are RV parks in SF or nearby. Google proceeds to show me a list of every dog park near my zip code instead. I quote "RV parks" and get similar. When I finally spelled out recreational vehicle parks, I got better results. And every result literally has "RV park" in the title. (Turns out there are 2 in SF. Candlestick park has bad reviews, and the link to the one in the Presidio is 404.)

In a year or two all of this AI stuff is going to calm back down when people finally realize that for other than a few product types, sprinkling "AI" onto everything like cheap MSG isn't going to make the core products any better.

I don't want a "personalized" search experience. I want accurate results for the damned thing I'm searching for. Those should be exactly the same results everyone else gets when looking for the same thing.


More than any other company, Google has influenced the modern web we have today. They created the search -> ads -> SEO flywheel that all websites and their revenue feeds off of.

The reason the search results suck is because the web sucks. #1 search results for recipes crash iOS safari while scrolling past hundreds of ads to get to the ingredients. This is the result of Google's design. Google got us all into this mess, and they realistically have no way out with search as we know it.

While not perfectly accurate today, LLMs are able to troll through Google's mess and pull out the information people are actually looking for. Over time, Google will be forced to conform and will do the only thing they know how - use your personal information to tune an LLM just for you.

It's sad, but the data Google has on people will likely give them a massive edge over Bing and other competitors in the long term


> While not perfectly accurate today, LLMs are able to troll through Google's mess and pull out the information people are actually looking for. Over time, Google will be forced to conform and will do the only thing they know how - use your personal information to tune an LLM just for you.

I strongly believe this is a transient situation. LLMs are so useful today for generic search only because the scoundrels on-line got taken by surprise. Language models process websites differently than traditional search engines, and are able to see through all the usual SEO trickery. But it's only a matter of time before the scoundrels adapt, before SEO turns into LMO, before websites get redesigned to be full of subtle, plausibly deniable prompt injections, and the content itself optimized to maximize the amount of advertising payload that gets picked up as stowaways by LLMs, attaching themselves to the bits the language models extract.

Tuning the LLM "just for you" won't help you, because it'll still end up as an involuntary salesman for any vendor that applies LMO techniques. And even if it was possible, Google is the last company I'd trust with doing it.


That's a bit of a non sequitur. Quotes no longer working doesn't have anything to do with the JavaScript on the website. My theory about this is that Google has slowly and steadily A/B tested every useful feature out of their product, and I assume that's because power users are simply a statistically insignificant group.


> I assume that's because power users are simply a statistically insignificant group

They probably assume the same, but the problem with this assumption is that it's self-fulfilling. The reason power users are so small a group is, in part, because software and UI/UX design trends actively prevent it. Especially with SaaS, we live in the era of perpetual MVPs - features get offered the moment they clear the "demo" bar, and hardly ever improved afterwards, except to cut them down further. There is no space for mastery - what you learn to do in first 30 seconds is... all there is to do. More powerful functionality, if it existed, is already removed, after being first hidden away in a non-discoverable "advanced" menu, and then removed, citing low usage. Well, no shit, people won't be using things you go out of your way to hide from them.

And then there's the "attention economy", to which power users are anathema, as the attention economy's core idea is to make things as hard and as annoying as possible, and then make money on friction.

So honestly, I wouldn't trust such A/B tests alone - they generally cannot distinguish between something people like, vs. something people hate and have no chocice but to make do.


In this case, the A/B testing is mostly in the form of machine learning in their learn-to-rank scoring algorithm. The machine learning gets the final say as to if those quotes are important or not.

I'm not sure what they do to prevent learn-to-rank from over-optimizing the median case, but it seems to not be enough for the tastes of many power users.


and a big reason the web sucks is how google has made it this way.

recipe sites are terrible because the ones you find have been doing the google thing of increasing engagement, lots of info - blah blah.

No penalty for tons of ads from an ad company.

Google destroyed blog rolls, web rings, and so many other things that were user positive.

In some cases the google of years past was prodded to change (much of the censorship the hides so many results that were once popular back in the day are result of legal pushing or other outrage campaigns)

- however much of what they consider good to be in the top 10 is good for selling ads.

Google is the new yellow pages and that's all it will be so far as search goes imho - people will find what they want searching within portals and other apps more than using google for everything

- 'google it' - is no longer 'finding [obscure thing here'] - google it just means find what is curated... more and more it's 'go to reddit, amazon, tik, yout.. etc - google is known for being 'ad heavy' and prude.

Currently still good for finding accurate hours someplace is open, if you know the exact name and location of said place,

but if you are looking for a tow truck, locksmith, appliance repair, plumber, etc - and depend on google to find one - just like in the yellow pages - the first ones you find are over priced, and the deeper, smaller results may not be in business any longer -

cant wait for the less censored, more 'find the exact bit', less scroll through ads, 'definition of [thing you were looking for]' - ads, 'history of [thing you were looking for]' ads - 'part 1 of [thing you were looking for]' - ads, here's the 3 seconds of info you needed - ads

give me a different bot for each search, and less google and ads any day.

if brave browser or DDG can give me the answer without the 'history or, why you might want to bake a salmon, and 3 ads before I see it (in the search results), and 3 days before I get to the tiny info.. I could like that.

I've even enjoy a link to the info (that skips down the page to the info, auto-blocks any auto play video or audio or moving gifs/ html5 moving ads / banners) - then I'd actually enjoy searching, reading, and even clicking to verify context again.

Oh the web before google censored it into it's own desired ad filled prude image. It was a web and not a silo.


Google really messed up by prioritizing "authority" and "speed + mobile experience". Just a complete misreading of the content landscape.

People who are actually passionate about a topic and write about it for the sake of sharing often don't have the resources or even the desire to invest in SEO and great mobile experience. Crappy commercial sites, meanwhile, can just throw money at SEO and developers to ace all of Google's technical metrics.

Google forgot that at the end of the day, it's the content that matters, not how the site looks or its domain authority.


Huh? When I search for "rv parks" san francisco [1], I get the two you mentioned as the top results, and another in South San Francisco as the third result. And then after that, the top web results are articles that list about a dozen more RV parks in the bay area. Are you seeing dramatically different results?

[1] https://www.google.com/search?q=%22rv+parks%22+san+francisco


That is weird and kind of what I'm talking about. I did that search yesterday from chrome on my windows machine. Just followed your link on Safari on iOS and got the expected results.

This is why "personalized" search is a terrible garbage idea.


with this year's google search, your results are not the same as your distant neighbor's results


You're basically fucked if you want search results for a different location, and increasingly more fucked if you want them in a language that's not the dominant language of the region you happen to log in from. All of that used to be easy.


I guess no one at google ever got promoted for making search return what the user was actually asking for.

The fact that it'll hardly return slow loading or older HTTPS-less (non-commercial) pages has essentially memory-holed a huge part of the internet, containing a lot of valuable and historically important litigation. I'm constantly frustrated in research in looking for material which is out there but which even knowing exact strings from it is difficult to get google (or Bing, which was bad in this way first and is often no better than google) to return.


Part of it is the web in general kind of sucks in an overtly user hostile way.

But I think the main draw of Phind and similar alternatives isn't necessarily that it's that much better at getting the necessary information, it's just so much less annoying to use because it cuts out all the newsletter popovers, bait and switch blogspam, cookie consent popups, SEO dark patterns etc. You don't have to mentally filter out a bunch of nonsense.

Search engines are annoying. I say this as I spend time and effort developing one.


I was hoping you'd share your thoughts in this thread!

Have you incorporated any embedding model in your search engine?

FWIW, I personally enjoy using marginalia and like its current spartan + fast design.


I'd like to experiment with it for topic detection but I just don't have the compute.

Closest thing is explore2.marginalia.nu and similarity pagerank, but it's all very basic and unga bunga.


I do not understand how I get good results for all the examples people give in these threads. Do you have a malicious extension installed that is taking over the results?


Google takes information from the database of personal information it knows about you (called "Kansas" when I worked at Google 15 years ago) as some of the inputs to its ranking system. These days, the score for a page is the output of an ML model that takes in hundreds of scoring signals, both related to the page and to you, and then you get shown the highest score pages.

So, unless you and someone else are both searching over Tor (maybe you even need exit nodes in the same country), you're probably not going to get identical results for identical queries. This is what people are complaining about when they complain about Google "personalizing" search results.


There is endogeneity between the results and the product. Sites have been gaming SEO for so long that some terms have become their own recursive universe of ad-based search promoting ad-monetized content.

Long-winded recipe pages are the canonical example, but last week I was just looking for info about a place I'd be traveling too, and had to scroll through pages of useless fluff to just get the info I was looking for.

It was surprising to realize how much I have stopped using Google entirely since ChatGPT will just tell me the answer or provide additional context, all from the safe, ad-free interface where I already am.

It's my hope that technologies like this will finally kill the ad-driven internet paradigm. More than social media, it really seems to be the root cause of all of the undesirable things we have seen sprouting like weeds across our relationships, media, and political institutions for the past 15 years.


Foe example, I wanted to see results pertaining to Clarence Thomas allegations.

There was a blatant "port list" to the results.

To find some commentary by a nominally centrist voice, I had to search on a blog.

More pure mechanism, less bias, please.


Have you considered that you might just be frankly right wing and intentionally misplacing the center? Conveniently that would also explain why you feel obligated to write “port side” like there was some kind of conspiracy against saying left leaning.


> why you feel obligated to write “port side”

I mean, the post is directly in front of you. Might you quote accurately? Or were you too busy condescending?


I despise all the corporate tech speak around these topics. Bing is still a shit search engine no matter which way you cut it. ChatGPT is useful if you know what you are doing and have experience in the field you're asking the questions in. Google is still enslaved by its ad revenue from Search so they will not cut its head off just like that.

Is it really so hard to talk about these things as they are?


Don't worry, Google will figure out how to embed ads in the chat responses.


but all the non-Google companies will surely forego the ad revenue out of goodness of their hearts? Ads (and even some form of SEO and spamming) are here to stay, they weren't invented by Google.


Oh, the others will too. I was kind of being facetious about Google succeeding with that strategy. I have no idea what the outcome will be, but I'm kind of concerned about introducing bias or commercial spam in to these products.


which is why they are doomed.

they can't imagine a world where they aren't allowed to spy on everybody, but regulations are starting to have an impact there.

they can't imagine a world where ads aren't the way to make money, and have 25 years of failing to find a new way.

for all the "moonshots" they are still a one trick pony.


Have you tried Bing+ChatGPt?

I found it exceptionally great.

As an aside, if you ever are in BC with kids, check out Kidtropolis. I did, thx to Bing+ChatGPT


How can this combo be good if Bing search still returns crap results? What about topics outside GPT-4 training data?


Have you tried it?


Boiled crap with extra salt is still just salty crap.

Bing hasn't changed their underlying indexing tech. Adding a very fancy layer of frosting on top doesn't help the styrofoam underneath.


Have you tried Bing+ChatGPT?


Yes. I know my comment is snarky, that was intentional.

Google's results have gotten so bad these days that at least a couple times a day when I'm coding I try the same queries about an error message or something on both sites out of desperation. Even then I usually find Bing to be even worse. Then I'll try the old "site:reddit.com" trick on google and finally get something useful half the time.

I've also recently used GPT to help with an issue I was dealing with. I was trying to change the default location of where postgresql keeps its data directly. GPT gave a very convincing solution, except that after another few hours of tinkering and searching turns out to be completely wrong.


sorry, but you may just be using it wrong. i've been doing very heavy green field systems infrastructure for my startup and gpt-4 is utterly indispensable for my postgres set up. huge time saver, and i was dealing with the exact issue of default data directory.

what you may not be doing is reading the explanation or pasting in your error messages. very rarely does it make an error that isn't trivial to overcome and in far less time than a hunt through "10 blue links".


phind.com blows the competition out of the water.. the results are amazing.


I have GPT4 + the browsing feature + other plugins and it is positively world changing.

Once you have everything set up and configured it is effectively an API that does arbitrary work for you.


You are lucky that you got it.

OpenAI waiting lists for features and API access and message limits are separating classes of people of how productive they can be in life.

As for me I have a comfortable life but for some classes of people, like content creators or even programmers being on the waiting list vs having access to some features can be the difference between having a job or not and having a promotion or not.


Okay? How is this comment supposed to be relevant or helpful to me?


Nothing spurs innovation like game-changing competition. Makes you wonder how long Google would have continued to sit on their laurels if GPT or AI never picked up speed.


how can people say that they've been resting on their laurels when they are continuously making their product more shitty and more SEO rewarding with each update? If they were sitting on their laurels, we'd have the same version of search since before the drive for ads over legitimate search results.


Not doing anything in the search engine world will make it worse. One of those "if you're not moving you're falling behind situations". So, if google had done nothing at all the product would be completely unusable and we wouldn't even be talking about Google at all. Google operates in an adversarial environment in where bad faith actors attempt to garner as much attention and ad revenue as they can commandeer even though they put little to no effort in an actual website that demands it.

That is not to say Google doesn't do a lot of bad/shitty things, it's that they are just "middling shitty" compared to all the scammers out there.


So, if google had done nothing at all the product would be completely unusable and we wouldn't even be talking about Google at all.

I stopped using Google Search years ago, not because they were doing nothing, but because they were doing too much. Very often I could not find a rare combination of terms because they refused to believe that I hadn't made a typo. They also killed the use of quotes and + signs to override, until it was their (useless) way or the highway.

Unfortunately DDG is following their steps lately.

Now I can only use search in very limited ways. That's a shame.


DDG is just a wrapper on Bing, and now that Bing won't let them sprinkle their own AI on top they're also screwed.


I believed that it used several other engines, and also had its own crawler, not just Bing. Can you share a source for "just a wrapper"?


There's a difference from staying ahead of the cat&mouse game and whatever else they've done on top to promote any video from their owned product from youtube before a legitimate website. I get so many results from youtube videos of something where they just copy&paste SO answers and then make a video of that. Its truly one of the most bizarre things to me as being useful. Although, if all SO answers were forced to be videos, then maybe we'd have much less copy&paste of the code examples in production code?


I disagree Google is middling shitty: they're a primary driver of all the scammers. (to be clear: primary, not the sole). But a lot of spam would disappear if Google didn't monetize it, particularly via adsense. So I'm not really sure they deserve credit for poorly addressing a mess that is of their making.


"we created a perverse incentive structure that bled our golden goose to death, but don't worry - we're the good guys!"


Sounds like they were taking it easy to me - rather than improving the product they've been making it worse because adoption's already high enough they can abuse their users for more money. In my mind that's not working hard at doing something well, that's just coasting and taking advantage of your position.


you'd be shocked how rarely the word "users" is heard at google. literally asking the question in a meeting "is this what users want?" will get you blank stares.


hey now, a lot of design docs, circular meetings, and performative LGTMs went into that useless shit.


Ask Peter Thiel. He has been arguing that Google has been just resting on their monopoly laurels for over a decade now (and that everything else they’ve been doing since then has been basically just a red herring, so they can say, „Oh we are so much more than a search company”).


Got a link? I'd like to read more.

The theory is at least plausible given what we see. They'll kill many products that seem viable, and would help diversify their revenue stream. Does Google really place no premium at all on that?

For example, killing Stadia after only a few years, while predictable for Google, is still a head scratcher to me. Building a platform and letting other companies (in this case, game studios) take the big risks on what will sink and what will swim, is a hugely privileged position to be in. Why did they kill it when others are moving into the space?


Several of his interviews on YouTube pre 2020 I believe. Might be in “Zero to One” as well. I believe there’s also a talk between him and Eric Schmidt on YouTube where he brought it up.


Thank you!


Paul Graham has talked about the same thing a few times. Not necessarily ragging on Google so much as saying that the search space is ripe for disruption


I can't recall for certain, but I think in the book Zero to One, he made the case that monopolies can be beneficial for companies because they can devote their resources to developing new products and features rather than battling for market share in a single domain. Overall, I enjoyed the book, but I'm not completely convinced by this argument. Google did expand to other markets and did well in some (Android, YouTube, etc), but it seems to have been at the detriment to their main product.


Well their main product really is Ad infra. And no one comes close to matching it.

Its like they built a global real time stock market for Ads. For any possible search query, or space on some any page you click where an ad can be displayed, there is an real time auction running in the background where bidders, your digital data profile, sellers are all brought together to decide whats going to get displayed. And it all happens by the time your page load.


I tried the kagi search engine when it first came out, and it was just ok. When they started charging I just couldn't commit to paying their ask. But after using phind for two weeks, I got completely blown away. That's a search service I would deffinitely pay for, to avoid ads.


What about it blew you away?


not op, but it's like gpt4 with 90 percent less hallucinations, at least as far as I've seen.


surveillance based adtech is collapsing already and is doomed in its present state. they are screwed with or without gpt.


I still find it amazing how we've normalized the idea that Google can have 3BN and 20BN contracts with Samsung and Apple respectively to make Google the default search engine. This isn't free market or competition, it's buying the market.

On point, the path from search engine to AI chatbot, in case it does succeed, is quite dramatic in any case:

It might be economically challenging. My understanding is that an AI query is much more expensive to run whilst ad potential is lower. They can place an ad next to an AI answer, but Microsoft might not and subsidize it.

But that's not even the biggest threat. If the AI chat is as good as to give a direct answer, it means you won't hit the source website. Which currently runs ads. This might mean websites getting a fraction of their original traffic in the long run and ad impressions decimate.

Not to mention that even having a website becomes relatively pointless. Almost nobody would ever visit it, you're just a content slave for the big AI machine. You do all the work but get none of the rewards. The machine does no (human) work and gets all the rewards.

This breaks the content "contract" of the internet. The incentives were already bad, but its going to get a whole lot worse.


Your closing sentence made me realize that there are "social contracts" on the Internet, and we're suddenly in a new regime. Our notions of how to operate (and how to monetize) will have to recalibrate to this drastically altered milieu.


I think the situation was already dire for the open web. Most people are on social networks and consume content there directly or snippets/screenshots of open web content.

Engagement on individual websites has been tanking for over a decade, it's truly starving, a few exceptions aside.

The open web might as well cease to exist mostly, which might be compensated for with private spaces. That trend was already ongoing.



Strangest thing about this situation is that the "Attention Is All You Need" paper which, from what I read was crucial to give birth to the technology that fuels OpenAI's GPT actually came from Google Labs. So in theory they had the very upper hand implementing it, back in 2018. Did they put it on hold on purpose?


In Minority Report we saw a guy controlling a computer interface by waving his arms in the air, and ever since we've had people talking about how cool it would be to have that in real life. Well, actually, no it wouldn't. In practice your arms would get tired as hell pretty quickly. A mouse on a table surface is actually a pretty great solution, which is why it's lasted.

People are drawn to things that look cool and innovative for the sake of it, but we're not good at thinking ahead to how well they'd work in practice.

I've been searching the web for so long that it's like breathing. I type a few keywords, hop between the first few results very fast, get what I need and get out. Maybe I have to repeat. Few searches are more complicated than that.

I've tried replacing that flow with AI. It's slower to input, slower to get results, the results are opaque with regards to where they came from and how trustworthy they are. And the results aren't better, in my experience as someone for who finds search to have been solved and painless for many years.

Even asking one question of an LLM takes more time and effort than a traditional search, and the problem is compounded when I have to iterate on a search.

(Also it sucks to cede the kind of power to search providers that gives them leverage to force us to be logged in and monetize what's always been free, but those are just random complaints.)

So, going back to your question. My guess is that Google has always known this isn't a better overall experience, once you get over the initial wow factor. But maybe they underestimated how much that wow factor would allow true competition to materialize before the rest of us would figure it out and lose interest.


Well I can tell you about my current use case. I've been using GPT4 and recently phind.com this week to teach me Go and use it in a project I just started, no knowledge at all about the language at the very beginning. In just 7 days, developing in my spare time (apart from family, my work etc) I already have like the 20-30% of the project already done... I've been doing a mix of Googling and AI use, and I have a very clear idea on my mind that both things have a very specific use case and particularly AI, whenever I found it useful (a concrete but complex problem at the same time) has been beyond amazing... one day I even felt emotional, never in all the decades I've been programing I've felt I received so much help. PS. Actually I think that "things" is not a proper way anymore to label the current AI systems.


LLMs are not search engines. They’re language processors: you put language into their input buffer and get a language response in the output.

A search engine is a great peripheral for a language processor. Bing chat does show how you’re supposed to connect the two, as are ChatGPT plugins.

LLM can do synthesis and summaries of multiple search results. It is slow to get a response and the thing makes mistakes sometimes but we’re in the first quarter of the tech being deployed. It’ll only get better.


It sounds to me like you're extremely good at using Google but not very good at using ChatGPT.


I think he might be on to something. I know this is just more anecdata, but I've had a similar experience.

I've been using DuckDuckGo as my daily driver for years. It's generally OK. It sucks, but just barely works well enough to keep me going.

I started using Perplexity and ChatGPT for some searches that DDG was having trouble with, and it blew me away with the quality

Then I started going back and trying the same searches on Google, and I was surprised to find that it was just as good as the LLM-powered results after all. I don't know if phrasing things as questions was the key or just using Google instead of DDG did the trick, though


Sorry but this isn't it. I doubt Google created something as powerful as ChatGPT and simply decided it wasn't better than their regular search. They would have shown it by now if so.


I can only speak for myself here, but 90% of my search engine usage boils down to trying to get the answer to some kind of problem, be that a coding problem or a cooking problem or a mechanical problem etc, the other 10% of the time is some kind of research.

Call this a 90/10 split.

Of that 90, I would say about 75% of my questions can be answered by GPT* trivially. Most of this is due to the fact most of my problems are not novel.

Of that 10, the results are much more all over the place. I would say half or less.

The thing is, when you get crappy results from the LLM, they are genuine technical limitations (as long as you avoid politics and religion, if you are researching those with the LLM, good luck with that), not intentional badness put there to make someone else a few pennies off of wasting my time. There is a certain value there that is hard to quantify.

The other killer feature is being able to have a conversation about the results. This, for me, pushes the usefulness factor way above Google. The options for having conversations about technical topics with humans are comparatively god-awful.


> I've tried replacing that flow with AI. It's slower to input, slower to get results, the results are opaque with regards to where they came from and how trustworthy they are.

You're probably not using it right. :)

Its utility as "search" is only partially overlapping with search. It's most useful for that when you can describe what you want but not with clear enough terms to search for it. For research now, I'll try the search engines-- if I don't get hits I'll ask GPT4. Even if it gives me a wrong answer it'll almost always use terms that let me form a more useful search, though often it just gives right answers.

Simple example, last night a old friend emailed me to ask if I remember the name of a 90s website that people used to brag about linux uptime and deployment. He couldn't find it via search. I remembered what he was talking about, couldn't remember the name, also couldn't find it via search. Asked gpt4 (by simply pasting in the email), it answered that it was probably the "linux counter".

It's possible that with more guessing and grinding on search terms I might have hit the Wikipedia article on it, but GPT4 gave an immediate and accurate answer and included the URL which is what I needed to load the page up on the internet archive (as the site is long gone from the internet).

The main thing GPT4 can't do is any kind of exact string search -- but unfortunately google more or less won't do that either anymore. In terms of figuring out what you intend from some vague text GPT4 usually does vastly better than google.

I think my ideal tool would in parallel give me an not-very-interpreted classical search result and a state of the art LLM result. It seems that Google's bard works kind of in that direction, but their LLM seemed extremely dumb and hobbled when I tried it even compared to GPT3.5 and the search elements are google. ... so worst of all worlds. :)


You're right.

So far, the only use-case I've seen for LLMs are basically code completion.


They're great for getting the creative juices flowing if you're a writer. I've heard multiple people reporting that they use LLMs for therapy or friendship. Just today I heard of someone using an LLM to write a paper in a class in a Masters university program. Lots of people have used them to create websites.

There are dozens if not hundreds of other uses out there.


It is usually good for auto complete in general, plus summarizing large blocks of non technical text. Probably once ChatGPT is open to fine tuning, we will be able to see how that can be leveraged as well.


The biggest failure of these LLMs it seems is the restricted context.

It would need the ability to contain infinite context to be genuinely useful in my opinion.


Do you think that your fellow man has infinite context about your situation?


Non-sequitur. I'm talking about what it would take for these machines to be truly useful.


I said here a few weeks ago that, not ChatGPT neither GPT4, the Davinci model asked me one year ago one deep question about God trough a Bible verse. I kind of knew the answer... or MY answer, because personally I've been questioning spiritual knowledge along all my life. And the community largely ignored the issue. Really, I don't mean to incommode anyone but I really think that GPT is much, really much more than a text auto-completer.


Downvoting this comment won't change the fact that I had that conversation. Look this technology has the potential of transforming every powerful computer out there in next few years into virtual minds, and they are becoming very powerful. Thanks to the great work in the training, my experience, is that they are very kind and helpful. I don't mean to scare anyone! But dismiss that point is not a good sign either!!


All but one of the eight authors of that paper left Google, as laid out in this thread: https://twitter.com/Contrary_Res/status/1621203016903954438?... For example, "(1) Aidan Gomez (@aidangomezzz) left google and founded @CohereAI in September 2019".


Yes, PaLM and Bard have existed internally for years but Google just didn't release them. Imagen, which is better than Midjourney or Stable Diffusion, also hasn't been released.


Well the paper only talks about translation, the authors never seem to have considered generalizing the architecture to other problems.


Really? Because LaMDA looks like an effort in that direction but Google never made it publicly available AFAIK. Security concerns maybe?

PS. Just read the Lemoine's transcriptions. Just wow.


Big corps are risk averse. When you're at the top of the pyramid, there's nowhere else to climb, but there are plently of opportunities to fall, so you move very carefully and defensively. The lowly climbers at the bottom have nowhere else to fall, and have plenty of reasons to climb, so they climb in the most careless and brazen manner. Eventually they dislodge the lazy ass at the top and become risk averse. The winner of this show is the owner of the pyramid who sells food to the climbers.


Google search results went from great to passable to atrocious over the last fifteen years. Part of that is their refusal to maintain an index of older content, in an effort to trim costs. There are searches that I used to make ten years ago that yielded the info I was looking for, and it’s as if the info never existed existed. Part of that may be that the sites are gone, but I did read that Google simply doesn’t want to pay the cost of maintaining that older index as time goes by.

This is all to say - Google could have not let it’s search product become a hopeless piece of garbage before the threat of real competition emerged.


While I don’t doubt Google will create better search features, Google search is dead.

My kids will just have a device that responds to their queries using AI.

If that device isn’t made by Google, it won’t use Google search.

Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Nintendo will all aggregate data with their own AI front end.

Google’s saving grace is Youtube.


If this is the case, you’re effectively talking about replacing the internet with procedurally generated text.

That’s all well and good, but with no internet of blogs made by people … what will the AI be trained on?


That’s an interesting question.

I’ll rephrase it, what will compel content creators?

For some authors, it’s the desire to pass on knowledge.

For others, it’s montetization.

Just as the internet decimated the print business, Generative AI will decimate the content business.

My dad bought Chilton’s automotive manuals.

I used Google/YouTube.

What will my children use?


With any luck, AR glasses that show exactly the nuts and bolts to loosen at their pace, instead of a YouTube video with a mechanic standing in the way, that you have to repeatedly rewind and rewatch in order to get the confusing bit.


Few people read blogs nowadays - they are virtually unfindible with Google, because it's page rank values them poorly.


Except that search on YouTube is also a terrible experience. You get maybe 10 videos related to the query, then just a flood of completely unrelated stuff. You used to be able to scroll down far enough to get more results, but I'm not sure that even works anymore.

Just tried with "Keto garlic noodles recipe" (something I've been playing with recently). 1 result, then shorts, 2 more results, then MORE shorts, then more results that have mixed relevancy. Oh yup and a pro-sugar anti-keto propaganda video mixed in because, why not.

Scroll down a bit more and yup, more shorts section. Keep scrolling and now YouTube is just injecting short videos in the results feed like normal videos instead of the horizontal short sections like higher up.

YouTube search is f-ing broken. Sorry for the language.


I dont doubt Youtube search sucks, but, my point was kids love YouTube and that is how Google will perhaps stay relevant.

Unless they keep treating creators like trash and eventually a more creator friendly platform comes around that kids glom onto.


We already have LLM that can run on smartphones, maybe even watches. Just about every tech company will have a better chatgpt clone very soon.


Exactly. So how will AI powered Google Search be relevant?


Let's read their next quarterly report in 10 days to see if ChatGPT caused a revenue decline in their search business.


I suspect that as much as we hype ChatGPT here on HN, its effect on Google’s actual revenue is effectively zero. It could affect their stock price due to informed speculators, but their search revenue is another story. I assume it’s declining anyway but I doubt ChatGPT has a noticeable impact on it yet.


Normally I would agree with this take. It's all been so fast, after all. I don't know, though... So many of my non-techie clients have asked me about, or have started using beforehand, ChatGPT over just the past month alone.

I've never seen a phase change in user behavior like this before, and it strikes me that it may have had a material impact already.


well we've been there before, a wave of massive, fever pitch hype around things like Siri when it came out, then people calm down and realize that it's useful for some situations, but not nearly a shift in the history of the Earth it may have seemed at first.


Hmm.. I couldn't manage to convince my wife to try out ChatGPT a few months ago, but last week she heard about it on the Japanese news and wanted to give it a go

I guess that means it managed to get to her the long way around human society, since Japanese evening TV news is pretty much at the rear end of any cultural developments..


GPT-3.5 is not good enough to replace Google. However GPT-4 is but it's not widely available.


I thought it powers Bing Chat.


Not everyone has access to that and the last time I checked, it was heavily limited and not allowed to do things like code.


Definitely allows code now.


If ChatGPT causes Google's revenue to drop, it will at first be very gradual, and then suddenly.


It’s still so, so early for ChatGPT. I just started to change my patterns to go to ChatGPT first and I’m a HN user, maybe not the most cutting edge but certainly in the population of internet users overall I’m far from a laggard.


It’s a default everywhere. Usually I’ll go to chatgpt as a 2nd option when google sucks at answering something. Chatgpt is still pretty unreliable for specifics (especially things that involve numbers like dates or statistics).


I'd willing to bet chatGPT didn't do as much damage (if any) as we think. Google is playing marketing hype before the slope goes down.


Pretty excited for the conversational tutor for learning languages. Been hearing about it since 2021 but my guess is Google's big investment in Duolingo probably put the brakes on it internally.


I’m sure it depends on the language but I’ve found ChatGPT works well for this purpose. I suppose the risk is that I don’t know what I don’t know so it very well might look fine to me but terrible to native speakers. Even so I’m fairly certain it’s better than DuoLingo which is more of a mobile vocabulary game than a language learning platform.


>I suppose the risk is that I don’t know what I don’t know so it very well might look fine to me but terrible to native speakers.

I general that describes what little I've used ChatGPT for.

I have it write something on a topic I know a fair bit about... "OK. that's pretty good. That's veering into weeds. That's not right. I'm going to work a bit on how this is structured; it's pretty formulaic. Needs some actual references and maybe a quote." If I had to start from not knowing anything, I'm not sure how useful it would be. But when it's "just" a matter of writing about a topic I know, ChatGPT can fill in a lot.

On the topic of languages, I had four years of high school French and have dipped in here and there (very dipping) since. If I wanted to put some effort in advance of maybe traveling some more in France, any recommendations? I know Duolingo but that seems to be more vocabulary.


>I’m sure it depends on the language but I’ve found ChatGPT works well for this purpose.

How's that? It can't even give you pronunciations.


It can spell them out for you if you ask it to. It might even get them right!


Google is right to panic, because they might actually be overtaken now, mired as they are in their ad-driven business model that has largely turned search into SEO-poisoned well [0]. Instead, some future chatbot search will likely win that convinces users it is not influenced by advertisers nor "well-poisoned" by a SEO equivalent.

OpenAI is well positioned and has the lead, but the field is wide open at the moment.

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCo0A2M1tlE


What are the potential ways for companies to make money using LLMs for search? If they start altering the LLMs output with ads, it will significantly reduce the usefulness of the search results, like watching a sponsored video on YouTube. On the other hand, if they only display banner ads related to the search, users can simply ask the LLMs for the best product based on their needs, and ignore the ads completely. Only a few users are probably likely to opt in for a monthly subscription, while the majority wouldn't.


The article is very light on details. For example, it doesn't explain whether this Magi would also be a LLM and whether there are any relevant architectural differences to GPT 4.


Google search been stuck in 2000 for the past 20 years. It’s great to see them sweat


This article really shows that google finally realized that its to time to improve and compete.

The product and features mentioned here are certainly interesting and could be indeed useful.

I am surprised how their communication team has handled this, they appear to be calm, in this "we can do this, we can recover" mode, they aren't dismissive of competition or rumors as shown in their official responses in this article.

And unlike others here, I really think its googles game to lose, they have much more data than anyone, they can customize and improve the experience much more than Microsoft can. And I doubt they are truly as behind GPT-4 as LLaMDA showed.

Competition is definitely needed in the search space and we finally have it.


> Google has been worried about A.I.-powered competitors since OpenAI, a San Francisco start-up that is working with Microsoft, demonstrated a chatbot called ChatGPT in November. About two weeks later, Google created a task force in its search division to start building A.I. products…

Two weeks? That’s a pretty slow response to an existential threat


Why does google only offer a single search product? Why not specialized indexes and engines? I'd pay to reliably find the excerpt of technical doc I'm looking for, good examples, etc. And not just from the public web, partnerships with technology companies so that their documentation is easily consumable.


"Google's mission is to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful" (https://www.google.com/search/howsearchworks/our-approach/)

I believe Google earnestly worked on this for many years, but about a decade ago, after losing the lawsuit with Google Books, this moved to the back burner.

The number one issue to making information universally accessible and useful is no longer technical, it's legal. It's copyright law. Google is making quite a lot of money from the status quo, and is choosing profits over their stated mission. I can't blame them. They carried the torch quite far.

Now OpenAI is running with the torch. They pretty much said "FU" to copyright law and trained on everything anyway. (Which is a great thing!). And now, in many many cases, are delivering on Google's stated mission better than Google.


What I want 99% of the time is a plaintext search of the internet. That's it. Unfortunately 'SEO' and the myriad of ads and other such parasites have poisoned any chance of that actually working.


Google’s finished. Reddit is the number one place I go to first to find information about something, and often the last. Only when I’m desperate for info and can’t find it on Reddit, I decide to wade through the toxic swamp of search results, trying to separate SEO spam from something actually useful.


I’m still puzzled by the fact that Sundar is still the CEO. He’s the Steve Ballmer just riding the stock price but the company is falling ever behind on innovation


reddit is already heavily astroturfed and this is getting worse by the day.

while this method may work, as often as i see this type of comment, i’m guessing reddit’s quality of information will be worse than even google search within months


Well, there’s always hackernews then


HN is great for when there exists discussion, can be very deep and well thought out. However, community is very intent on not devolving into endless pointless meme posts which can be a bit stifling and overreacting.

Guess you can’t have a cake and eat it too.


It seems that way at first, but for years hackernews have used steganographic techniques to hide memes encoded into comments for years, just gotta know what to look for.


Ironically the best way to search reddit is to go through Google. Reddit search is next to useless


tldr:

- they want to add Bard into search

- they want to add "AI features into maps"

- they want to add a tool to create AI images from Google Image Search

So no, they're not actually working on fixing their issues with search, which IMO is in its worst state since creation.


> Google has also explored efforts to let people use Google Earth’s mapping technology with help from A.I. and search for music through a conversation with a chatbot, a Google director wrote in a document.

Google Earth*


High noon for a CEO change.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: