Tools
Change country:

The Death of Search

For nearly two years, the world’s biggest tech companies have said that AI will transform the web, your life, and the world. But first, they are remaking the humble search engine.

Chatbots and search, in theory, are a perfect match. A standard Google search interprets a query and pulls up relevant results; tech companies have spent tens or hundreds of millions of dollars engineering chatbots that interpret human inputs, synthesize information, and provide fluent, useful responses. No more keyword refining or scouring Wikipedia—ChatGPT will do it all. Search is an appealing target, too: Shaping how people navigate the internet is tantamount to shaping the internet itself.

Months of prophesying about generative AI have now culminated, almost all at once, in what may be the clearest glimpse yet into the internet’s future. After a series of limited releases and product demos, mired with various setbacks and embarrassing errors, tech companies are debuting AI-powered search engines as fully realized, all-inclusive products. Last Monday, Google announced that it would launch its AI Overviews in more than 100 new countries; that feature will now reach more than 1 billion users a month. Days later, OpenAI announced a new search function in ChatGPT, available to paid users for now and soon opening to the public. The same afternoon, the AI-search start-up Perplexity shared instructions for making its “answer engine” the default search tool in your web browser.

[Read: The AI search war has begun]

For the past week, I have been using these products in a variety of ways: to research articles, follow the election, and run everyday search queries. In turn I have scried, as best I can, into the future of how billions of people will access, relate to, and synthesize information. What I’ve learned is that these products are at once unexpectedly convenient, frustrating, and weird. These tools’ current iterations surprised and, at times, impressed me, yet even when they work perfectly, I’m not convinced that AI search is a wise endeavor.

For decades, the search bar has been a known entity. People around the world are accustomed to it; several generations implicitly regard Google as the first and best way to learn about basically anything. Enter a query, sift through a list of links, type a follow-up query, get more links, and so on until your question is answered or inquiry satisfied. That indirectness and wide aperture—all that clicking and scrolling—are in some ways the defining qualities of a traditional Google search, allowing (even forcing) you to traverse the depth and breadth of connections that justify the term world-wide web. The hyperlink, in this sense, is the building block of the modern internet.

That sprawl is lovely when you are going down a rabbit hole about Lucrezia de Medici, as I did when traveling in Florence last year, or when diving deep into a scientific dilemma. It is perfect for stumbling across delightful video clips and magazine features and social-media posts. And it is infuriating when you just need a simple biographical answer, or a brunch recommendation without the backstory of three different chefs, or a quick gloss of a complex research area without having to wade through obscure papers.

In recent years, more and more Google Search users have noted that the frustrations outweigh the delight—describing a growing number of paid advertisements, speciously relevant links engineered to top the search algorithm, and erroneous results. Generative AI promises to address those moments of frustration by providing a very different experience. Asking ChatGPT to search the web for the reasons Kamala Harris lost the presidential election yielded a short list with four factors: “economic concerns,” “demographic shifts,” “swing state dynamics,” and “campaign strategies.” It was an easy and digestible response, but not a particularly insightful one; in response to a follow-up question about voter demographics, ChatGPT provided a stream of statistics without context or analysis. A similar Google search, meanwhile, pulls up a wide range of news analyses that you have to read through. If you do follow Google’s links, you will develop a much deeper understanding of the American economy and politics.

Another example: Recently, I’ve been reading about a controversial proposed infrastructure project in Maryland. Google searches sent me through a labyrinth of public documents, corporate pitches, and hours-long recordings of city-council meetings, which took ages to review but sparked curiosity and left me deeply informed. ChatGPT, when asked, whipped up an accurate summary and timeline of events, and cited its sources—which was an extremely useful way to organize the reading I’d already done, but on its own might have been the end of my explorations.

I have long been a critic of AI-powered search. The technology has repeatedly fabricated information and struggled to accurately attribute its sources. Its creators have been accused of plagiarizing and violating the intellectual-property rights of major news organizations. None of these concerns has been fully allayed: The new ChatGPT search function, in my own use and other reports, has made some errors, mixing up dates, misreporting sports scores, and telling me that Brooklyn’s Prospect Park is bigger than Manhattan’s (much larger) Central Park. The links offered by traditional search engines are filled with errors too—but searchbots implicitly ask for your trust without verification. The citations don’t particularly invite you to click on them. And while OpenAI and Perplexity have entered into partnerships with any number of media organizations, including The Atlantic—perhaps competing for the high-quality, human-made content that their searchbots depend on—exactly how websites that once relied on ad revenue and subscriptions will fare on an AI-filtered web eludes me. (The editorial division of The Atlantic operates independently from the business division, which announced its corporate partnership with OpenAI in May.)

[Read: AI search is turning into the problem everyone worried about]

Although ChatGPT and Perplexity and Google AI Overviews cite their sources with (small) footnotes or bars to click on, not clicking on those links is the entire point. OpenAI, in its announcement of its new search feature, wrote that “getting useful answers on the web can take a lot of effort. It often requires multiple searches and digging through links to find quality sources and the right information for you. Now, chat can get you to a better answer.” Google’s pitch is that its AI “will do the Googling for you.” Perplexity’s chief business officer told me this summer that “people don’t come to Perplexity to consume journalism,” and that the AI tool will provide less traffic than traditional search. For curious users, Perplexity suggests follow-up questions so that, instead of opening a footnote, you keep reading in Perplexity.

The change will be the equivalent of going from navigating a library with the Dewey decimal system, and thus encountering related books on adjacent shelves, to requesting books for pickup through a digital catalog. It could completely reorient our relationship to knowledge, prioritizing rapid, detailed, abridged answers over a deep understanding and the consideration of varied sources and viewpoints. Much of what’s beautiful about searching the internet is jumping into ridiculous Reddit debates and developing unforeseen obsessions on the way to mastering a topic you’d first heard of six hours ago, via a different search; falling into clutter and treasure, all the time, without ever intending to. AI search may close off these avenues to not only discovery but its impetus, curiosity.

The issues with factuality and attribution may well be resolved—but even if they aren’t, tech companies show no signs of relenting. Controlling search means controlling how most people access every other digital thing—it’s an incredible platform to gain trust and visibility, advertise, or influence public opinion.

The internet is changing, and nobody outside these corporations has any say in it. And the biggest, most useful, and most frightening change may come from AI search engines working flawlessly. With AI, the goal is to keep you in one tech company’s ecosystem—to keep you using the AI interface, and getting the information that the AI deems relevant and necessary. The best searches are goal-oriented; the best responses are brief. Which perhaps shouldn’t be surprising coming from Silicon Valley behemoths that care, above all, about optimizing their businesses, products, and users’ lives.

A little, or even a lot, of inefficiency in search has long been the norm; AI will snuff it out. Our lives will be more convenient and streamlined, but perhaps a bit less wonderful and wonder-filled, a bit less illuminated. A process once geared toward exploration will shift to extraction. Less meandering, more hunting. No more unknown unknowns. If these companies really have their way, no more hyperlinks—and thus, no actual web.


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
My boyfriend forgot I broke up with him after getting a concussion — now we’re married
"I'm like, 'Why is he messaging me this? I just broke up with him,'" Jenna recalls in a video posted to TikTok.
7 m
nypost.com
Mysterious ‘woyote dog’ caught on camera — and even experts are puzzled
Man’s best…fiend? A mysterious canine-like creature caught on camera in the Midwest wilds has experts scratching their heads — and scrambling to identify the baffling beast. “To us, the animal looks “coyote-esque” but has some dog-like aspects to its appearance (especially its ears),” the Voyageurs Wolf Project, a conservation organization in northern Minnesota, recently posted to...
8 m
nypost.com
Cheese sold at Aldi, Basket Market and more grocers recalled over listeria concerns
Savencia Cheese USA said investigators detected traces of listeria, a deadly bacteria, in equipment used to make cheese at its Lena, Ill. facility.
9 m
nypost.com
Meet Bob, the fish with a ‘human face’ 
Face it — this fish is a star. In a backyard in Leeds, UK, a 4-year-old koi named Bob has become a local celebrity, thanks to its human-like markings that resemble a man’s eyes, nose, and even a mustache. Bob’s owner Malcolm, 48, gushed that his prize pet was the “most friendly fish in the...
nypost.com
Morning in America again! Trump’s first hire — Susie Wiles — will deliver a Reagan 2.0 vision
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Donald Trump’s second administration is starting off on the best possible footing with the hire of Susie Wiles as chief of staff — putting him in position to create the most optimistic and forward-looking Republican White House since the 1980 election.  There was a time — and it wasn’t too long ago —...
nypost.com
Prominent NYC journalist, Iran critic reveals she was target of would-be assassins linked to Trump murder plot
FBI agents informed her the alleged would-be killers had planned to murder her.
nypost.com
A research boat will scan the seabed to help search for those missing in Spain's floods
A research vessel that investigates marine ecosystems has been diverted to help in the desperate search for the missing from Spain’s floods.
latimes.com
Nordstrom just launched an early Black Friday sale — here’s what we’re eyeing
We've still got a few weeks to go before Black Friday and Cyber Monday, but there's no need to wait to start saving.
nypost.com
Somber Walz spotted on daughter's Instagram after election loss: 'Live to fight another day'
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's daughter posted a photo of the former vice presidential candidate on Instagram following his election loss.
foxnews.com
House Dem describes awkward past encounter with Harris: 'She just walked away from me'
Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, D-Wash., says she had a past interaction in which Vice President Harris "just walked away from me."
foxnews.com
Beyoncé nominated for 11 Grammys
Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish, Chappell Roan, Charli XCX and Sabrina Carpenter are all nominated for major Grammys in 2025. Variety's Jem Aswad joins CBS News with what you to know about music's biggest night.
cbsnews.com
Jets lineman to play through extensive knee injuries | The Injury Report
Kirk A. Campbell, MD, a Sports Orthopedic Surgeon for NYU Langone, explains how Jets right tackle Morgan Moses will be able to play through an MCL tear and meniscus damage in his left knee, on the weekly ‘Injury Report’ segment with New York Post Sports anchor Dexter Henry. Watch the full video on YouTube: https://trib.al/pkEnnoY
nypost.com
White Sox reveal what they’re seeking in potential blockbuster Garrett Crochet as Mets show interest
The White Sox are making it easy for their trade partners.
nypost.com
The Desperation of Political Comedy
The comedian-to-campaign-influencer pipeline has muddled the genre.
theatlantic.com
Pelosi blames Harris' loss on Biden's late exit and no open Democratic primary
She also blasted Bernie Sanders in an interview with The New York Times.
abcnews.go.com
US climate leader calls Trump's threatened IRA rollbacks 'a fool's errand'
U.S. climate leaders met Friday to discuss their goals for progress under the new Trump administration, calling his threatened rollbacks of the IRA a "fool's errand."
abcnews.go.com
Mark Zuckerberg not liable in dozens of lawsuits over social media harm to children: judge
The judge found a lack of specifics about what Zuckerberg did wrong, and said "control of corporate activity alone is insufficient" to establish liability.
nypost.com
Doomsday prepper who blew a whopping $350K on supplies, weapons can ‘finally take a break’ after Trump win: ‘I am so grateful’
She's starting to save after the "red wave."
nypost.com
Al Michaels blasts officiating at end of thrilling Ravens-Bengals game: 'Too many games end this way'
The Baltimore Ravens pulled off a wild victory in an instant classic against the Cincinnati Bengals on Thursday, but Al Michaels felt they got some help from the referees.
foxnews.com
Senate races in Arizona, Nevada still not called; Democrats hold slim leads
Ballots are still being counted in Arizona and Nevada, leaving the Senate race results in those western states in limbo as voters wait to learn how big the Republican majority will be.
foxnews.com
What the success of 'Agatha All Along' means for the future of Marvel Television
In Screen Gab no. 156, we gush about the recently concluded 'Agatha All Along,' chat with 'Outer Banks' star Carlacia Grant, and offer recommendations for your weekend.
latimes.com
North Carolina vs. Kansas prediction: College basketball odds, picks, best bets Friday
Can the Tar Heels storm into Allen Fieldhouse and knock off the best team in college basketball?
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: Netflix’s ‘Outer Banks’ Season 4 Part 2, Filled With More Treasure-Hunting Adventure … But The End Just Might Devastate You
This season is heavy, man.
nypost.com
Caitlin Clark was 'really upset' at WNBA Draft for this reason
Caitlin Clark was on the top of the mountain when she was selected first in the WNBA Draft, but there was one aspect of the night that made her "really upset."
foxnews.com
Judge cancels court deadlines in Trump's 2020 election case after his presidential win
The judge overseeing Donald Trump’s 2020 election interference case canceled court deadlines after prosecutors said they need time to reassess after Trump's presidential win.
latimes.com
Budget airline Israir to launch flights between Israel and NY, ending wartime monopoly by flagship carrier El Al
An Israeli low-cost airline is planning to launch flights between Israel and New York this winter, ending the wartime monopoly on the popular route by Israel’s flagship carrier El Al, the Israeli Ministry of Transportation said on Wednesday.
nypost.com
'Rapid pace': Former Trump official makes prediction about incoming admin's aggressive border plan
Former acting CBP Commissioner Mark Morgan says that he expects the new Trump administration to begin ramping up border security very quickly after its past experience.
foxnews.com
AI Is Killing the Internet’s Curiosity
Peering into the future of search.
theatlantic.com
‘The enthusiasm gap was real’ – How did so many election polls whiff again?
“Other outlets had other polls but … the ones we had were correct,” said Post reporter A.G. Gancarski.
nypost.com
Behind on your credit card bills this November? 3 options to consider
Missing credit card payments can have serious consequences, but there are ways to get your finances back on track.
cbsnews.com
J.J. Redick’s frustration with D’Angelo Russell boils over in angry sideline scene
It is the James family that has garnered the most headlines through the NBA’s first three weeks, though the rookie head coach leading the 4-4 Los Angeles Lakers is making a strong case for second place. J.J. Redick was in the limelight once again on Wednesday night, very obvious in his displeasure with point guard...
nypost.com
Here's how far HELOC interest rates have dropped this year
HELOC interest rates have dropped by a significant margin since January. Here's what borrowers should know now.
cbsnews.com
Here’s who could be in Trump’s cabinet | Reporter Replay
President-elect Donald Trump — fresh off his emphatic victory over Vice President Kamala Harris — is spending Wednesday with his team in Palm Beach strategizing about how to fill out his second administration. The Trump transition team has been at work for months and is preparing for an internal “unveiling,” campaign adviser Brian Hughes told...
nypost.com
Ticket demand, prices skyrocket in anticipation of Bronny James' G League debut: report
Bronny James is showing the ability to draw a crowd. Fans interested in seeing the 20-year-old's first G League game will have to turn to the secondary ticket market.
foxnews.com
Nick Sirianni accidentally sparks Jalen Hurts injury drama in awkward Eagles press conference
Hurts missed practice Wednesday for what was deemed to be rest, and Sirianni was asked about that on Friday.
nypost.com
Destruction from Mountain fire shown in before-and-after satellite photos
Satellite images show Camarillo neighborhoods wiped out by the Mountain fire. See the before-after pictures of the damage.
latimes.com
Inside TikTok’s ‘cold room’ trend — and how to create one in your own home
Cold rooms—also known as cold-air dorms, or cold airs—are spacious, quiet, and dimly lit areas in sorority and fraternity houses, furnished with multiple bunk beds to accommodate members for sleeping.
nypost.com
Gavin Newsom threatens Trump like Kathy Hochul — but HE has more power to cause problems
The California governor runs a border state with hotspots for illegal crossings. That means his threats (while totally political) carry an undertone of real menace.
nypost.com
Trump victory opens door for historic tariff hikes
President Trump is readying the most extensive tariffs in nearly a century, but some of those historic levies will likely be used as bargaining chips in new trade negotiations.
washingtonpost.com
Drinking milk can increase risk of heart disease by up to 21% — but only for one sex
Drinking regular cow's milk could increase your risk of developing ischemic heart disease (IHD), a condition that can lead to heart attacks, according to a new study published in BMC Medicine on Friday.
1 h
nypost.com
Trump's 'they/them' ads combined culture war, economic worries to make effective pitch: expert
In his campaign’s final days, Trump targeted culture issues, airing ads that criticized Kamala Harris’s stance on gender policies such as transgender treatments for prison inmates.
1 h
foxnews.com
Red-district Democrat recalls Kamala Harris blowing her off at Christmas party: 'Kind of an eye roll'
A Washington Democrat who represents a red district recalled a telling encounter with Kamala Harris at a Christmas party that could explain her election loss.
1 h
foxnews.com
My Mom Refuses to Acknowledge a Very Traumatic Childhood Memory
How can she pretend like this didn’t happen?
1 h
slate.com
Ruggable splashes its rugs with festive flair: Shop the holiday collection
We're glossing over these prints.
1 h
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Born For The Spotlight’ On Netflix, A Taiwanese Dramedy About Actresses In Different Career Phases
The series feels more like a hang-out show than one with an overriding plot, but in this case that's OK.
1 h
nypost.com
ESPN host Kirk Herbstreit's beloved game day-crashing dog, Ben, has died
Ben, Kirk Herbstreit's certified emotional support animal, had been diagnosed with cancer earlier this year. Audiences grew to love the 10-year-old golden retriever who appeared on TV with his owner.
1 h
npr.org
Gustavo Dudamel, L.A. Phil and Gabriela Ortiz earn Grammy nominations for 'Revolución Diamantina'
Gustavo Dudamel and the Los Angeles Philharmonic's recording of Mexican composer Gabriela Ortiz's "Revolución Diamantina" earns multiple Grammy nominations. Wild Up earns a nod too.
1 h
latimes.com
UK’s leftwing foreign secretary humiliated for kissing up to Trump after calling him a ‘neo-Nazi-sympathizing sociopath’
British foreign secretary David Lammy on Friday dismissed his past insults as "old news" as he publicly congratulated Donald Trump and remarkably claimed he could find "common ground" with the president elect.
1 h
nypost.com