Google’s AI-Powered Search Generative Experience Could Be Available Behind a Paywall: Report

Google is planning to introduce its artificial intelligence (AI)-powered search engine features, dubbed Search Generative Experience (SGE) behind a paywall, as per a report. Google added an AI chatbot to Search to create Snapshots — a brief explanation of the searched query, along with helpful links that might offer more information. While unveiling, the tech giant revealed its plans to allow ads to the Snapshot to bring in revenue. However, based on the report, it seems now Google is taking a different route.

The information comes from a Financial Times report, which cites unnamed sources familiar with the matter, and states that Google might charge a fee to allow access to its AI-powered Search. Since the company just recently expanded the testing of SGE by including users in the US who did not even sign up for the feature, this shift might not be immediate. But when the tech giant eventually releases the service to the public, users might have to pay for it.

The report did not mention if a particular revenue system was already decided for the service but speculated that it could be bundled with the recently introduced Gemini Advanced subscription for the most advanced version of its Gemini AI. On the other hand, it could be offered as a standalone service as well. The confusion is justified given Google has never charged the end-user any fee for using its core Search product.

It is believed that the reason behind this tiered segregation of AI features has to do with keeping the advertisers happy. As per the FT report, Google raked in a revenue of $175 billion (roughly Rs. 14 lakh crore) from Search, and more than half came from sales. If the tech giant incorporates SGE over its traditional search engine, it could significantly reduce advertiser spending since users will be less likely to click on a link to get information.

Another side of the equation is the website publishers who rely on traffic coming from Google Search rankings for revenue. SGE could also negatively affect them. The report highlights the structured premium tier is being planned as a solution to not lose out on the advertiser revenue, keeping publishers happy, but at the same time creating new revenue opportunities through its AI integration.


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Google’s AI-Powered Search Generative Experience Testing Reportedly Being Expanded to More Users

Google is reportedly expanding the testing for its Search Generative Experience (SGE) feature which was announced in May 2023. The feature works using generative artificial intelligence (AI) and once a query has been searched, it creates a snapshot of the key information around the keywords. The feature was so far limited to users who signed up for it in Google’s Search Lab. But now, it will be available to even those users who did not sign up for it. As per the report, this expansion of SGE is currently limited to the US.

According to a report by Search Engine Land, where the publication spoke with a Google Spokesperson, the SGE is now coming out of Search Labs, a platform where users can sign up to test early-stage or under-development Search features and share their feedback with the company. After signing up, users can see the new features on the Google app or Chrome browser when they are signed into their account.

But now, even those users who missed out on signing up will be able to experience the feature. As per the report, a company spokesperson said that SGE will now open up for a “subset of queries, on a small percentage of search traffic in the US.” This means the feature will be coming to a small segment of users within the US, who were not part of the testers. This is a standard procedure for feature testing and Google is likely reaching the end stages of development of SGE for its Search engine.

The report highlights that SGE will not appear for every searched query for these users. Instead, Google will begin with some specific set of queries where the tech giant believes the SGE format can be helpful. One specific example shared was “how do I get marks off painted walls”. Reportedly, the company plans to show the snapshots on more complex queries or queries that seek information across a range of websites.

Google also said that the user base of the feature was being expanded to get feedback from users outside of the tester community. This was being done to “learn how a more general population will find this technology helpful,” mentioned the report. There is still no word on when SGE will be launched globally.


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Google’s AI-Powered Search Generative Experience Expands to Over 120 New Countries and Territories

Google launched its generative AI-infused Search Generative Experience (SGE) in the US earlier this year and expanded the AI search tool to India and Japan in August. Now, Google is expanding SGE to more than 120 new countries and territories, the search engine giant said in a blog post Wednesday. SGE is also getting support for four new languages along with a few new upgrades and features that make the AI-powered search tool more interactive.

Search Labs and SGE in English is rolling out to over 120 new countries and territories across the globe, including Mexico, Brazil, South Korea, Indonesia, Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa, starting Wednesday, Google said in its blog post. Generative AI-powered Search will now also support Spanish, Portuguese, Korean and Indonesian languages.

Search Labs allows Google users to test new tools on Search, including SGE, and is available on the Google app on both Android and iOS. To enable it, users can open the Google app on their phones, tap the beaker-shaped Search Labs icon on top left and enable the SGE tool in the next page. For now, Search Labs and SGE is rolling out in the new countries only on Google Chrome desktop, with Google app access to be enabled over the coming week.

SGE is also bringing a few new features, including easier follow-up questions, AI-powered translation help, and more definitions for topics like coding, Google said. Users can now ask follow-up questions directly from the search results page. They can also view their previous queries and search results as they are exploring a topic. The follow-up update will be rolling out initially in English in the US over the coming weeks.

Additionally, translation feature is getting an update that will underline words in search phrase that could have multiple meanings. Users can select a specific meaning of the said word to get an accurate translation. According to Google, this AI-powered translation capability will roll out soon in the US for English-to-Spanish translations, with support for more countries and languages arriving in the near future.

Google is also expanding its definitions feature that launched in August. Initially available for topics like science, economics, or history, interactive definitions feature in AI overviews is being extended to new topics like coding and health information. This update will also be available first in English in the US, starting next month


Google I/O 2023 saw the search giant repeatedly tell us that it cares about AI, alongside the launch of its first foldable phone and Pixel-branded tablet. This year, the company is going to supercharge its apps, services, and Android operating system with AI technology. We discuss this and more on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
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Google for India 2023: AI-Powered Search Becomes More Visual and Local, New Services on Google Pay

Google rolled out its search generative experience (SGE) in India in August, bringing AI-generated responses and summaries to queries on its popular search engine. Generative AI search promised to provide more effective and engaging results and in-depth overviews. Now, the tech giant is rolling out improvements to its AI search tool in India. Google is making search generative experience in India more visual and localised for better results. The company announced the updates coming to its AI search in the country at its Google for India 2023 event held Thursday.

In its blog detailing new product experiences announced at the event, Google said it was adding new capabilities to SGE in India that make its AI-generated information preview more useful and easier to understand. SGE, Google said, will now be richer and more visual, adding more images and videos to some of its overviews.

“For example, when you search for something like, “what are the various ways to drape a saree?” you’ll be able to reference a more visual and easy-to-follow AI-powered overview with images and videos of multiple types of drapes,” Google explained in the blog.

Generative AI search is also becoming more localised, providing users location-specific responses. Users could find out what a city has to offer, explore things to do around them via SGE, which will now incorporate user reviews of places to provide better information.

Additionally, Google is also simplifying access to information on government schemes. In the coming weeks, SGE will help Indian users to easily navigate and find important information on over 100 government schemes in areas of healthcare, housing, employment, women’s welfare, farming, and more. All of this and everything else on SGE will be available in both Hindi and English languages.

Google is also expanding the capabilities of Google Lens, now allowing people to search for skin conditions visually similar to what they observe on their skin. Users can take a picture of their skin condition via Google Lens and get visual matches for information on it.

The company also announced new Google Pay services for both merchants and consumers. Google’s popular digital payments app is tying up with ePayLater to enable a credit line for merchants. It is also bringing sachet loans starting as low as start as low as Rs. 15,000 in partnership with DMI Finance. On the consumer side, Axis Bank is making its personal loans available on Google Pay, with more banks to follow. Users can now also avail credit lines from banks on UPI for payments via Google Pay, similar to a UPI payment.

Google is also bringing improvements to the shopping experience on its site, making it easier to find products and expanding discovery for small businesses. “Starting today, if you search for something like “Best phone under Rs. 15,000” on Google Search, you’ll now see a more visual feed of products to explore, with filters to help shoppers quickly and easily find the products they are looking for,” Google said on its blog.

YouTube, too, is getting new updates. The site will roll out an immersive watch page for news, which will pull content from credible sources. This feature will arrive in 11 Indian languages, starting Q4 2023.


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Google Introduces Search Generative Experience to Rival Microsoft Bing’s AI

Alphabet‘s Google rolled out more artificial intelligence for its core search product, hoping to create some of the same consumer excitement generated by Microsoft‘s relaunch of rival search engine Bing in recent months.

At its annual I/O conference in Mountain View, California, on Wednesday, Google offered an updated version of its namesake engine. Called the Search Generative Experience, the new Google can craft responses to open-ended queries while retaining its recognizable list of links to the Web.

“We are reimagining all of our core products, including search,” Sundar Pichai, Alphabet’s CEO, said after he took the stage at the event.

He said Google is integrating generative AI into search and other products, including Gmail, where it can create draft messages, and Google Photos, where it can make major changes to images.

US consumers will gain access to the Search Generative Experience in the coming weeks via a wait list, a trial phase during which Google will monitor the quality, speed and cost of search results, Vice President Cathy Edwards said.

Google’s foray into what is known as generative AI comes after the startup OpenAI introduced ChatGPT, the darling chatbot of Silicon Valley that launched a furious funding race among would-be competitors. Generative AI can, using past data, create brand new content like fully formed text, images and software code.

OpenAI, backed by billions of dollars from Microsoft and now integrated into Bing search, has become for many the default version of generative AI, helping users spin up term papers, contracts, travel itineraries, even entire novels.

For years the top portal to the internet, Google has found its own perch in question since rivals began exploiting the technology as an alternative to presenting content from the Web. At stake is Google’s slice of the gigantic online advertising pie that the research firm MAGNA estimated at $286 billion (nearly Rs. 23,43,860 crore) this year.

In an interview, Edwards said Google’s aim was to employ generative AI to reduce steps for consumers to make decisions and to let people ask a broader set of queries, including creative ones. Addressing how AI can spout incorrect information, Edwards said the company prioritized accuracy and citing trusted sources.

“AI can provide insight,” Edward said. “But what fundamentally people want at the end of the day is to be connected to information from real people and organizations, knowing, for example, that this health information comes from the WHO,” or the World Health Organization.

What outfit to wear

With the embedded AI, Google still looks and acts like its familiar empty search bar.

Generally available will be a new filter called “Perspectives” spotlighting blogs, videos and content from social media, the company said. Google also will mark up images the company generates with AI and make it easier for consumers to vet a picture’s authenticity, it said.

But while a search for “weather San Francisco” will as usual point a user to an eight-day forecast, a query asking what outfit to wear in the California city prompts a lengthy response generated by AI, according to a demonstration for Reuters earlier this week.

“You should bring layers, including a short-sleeved shirt and a light sweater or jacket for the day,” the result stated, including links to websites where it gleaned such advice.

Searches for news or to navigate to a specific website did not result in a response by generative AI, though users can prompt a chat and press a button for a follow-up query, the demonstration showed.

Bing’s search, through its partnership with OpenAI, can summarize web pages, synthesize disparate sources, compose emails and translate them. Microsoft has said every percentage point of share it gains in search advertising could draw another $2 billion (nearly Rs. 16,385 crore) in revenue.

While Bing has commanded no more than one-tenth of the search market, according to estimates, Google has practically the rest of that to defend. This means any hit to the reliability of its search engine could carry a big consequence. Generative AI programs have been found to create false or misleading results absent grounding in reliable answers.

Another challenge is the high expense of drawing on such AI, known as large language models. Edwards said, “We and others are working on a variety of different ways to bring down the cost over time.”

Ads will remain a central part of the experience, Edwards said. “We only get paid when there’s a click.”

Bard for 180 countries

In recent years, Google’s rivals have taken its research breakthroughs and run with them in products, outpacing their inventor.

ChatGPT came to light after an AI system Google revealed in 2017. The speed at which the chatbot grew, however — faster than any consumer application in history — encouraged the often deliberative Google to prod staff to hurry along projects so they were ready for public consumption.

In February Google announced its competing chatbot called Bard. A promotional video that month that showed Bard answering a question incorrectly propelled a stock slide shaving $100 billion (nearly Rs. 8,19,340 crore) off Google’s market value.

Now, Google is launching Bard in 180 countries and territories, with plans to expand its support to 40 languages, the company said.

Behind Bard also is a more powerful AI model Google announced called PaLM 2, which it said could solve tougher problems and draft better computer code.

© Thomson Reuters 2023  
 


Smartphone companies have launched many compelling devices over the first quarter of 2023. What are some of the best phones launched in 2023 you can buy today? We discuss this on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
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