“I’m a bot. Trust me, bro!”
No thanks. I’d rather scour 50+ articles to find what I need than have to trust some chatbot that doesn’t cite its work. Beyond that, it’s “stealing” content from the sites it crawls to build that knowledge while depriving those sites of traffic.
I don’t need to vet “how long to cook 6 lbs of pork shoulder in an instant pot” too hard.
Beep boop: 15 seconds per pound. Trust me, bro, I’m a bot.
Will provide singular answers, with no sources, that no one else can see and therefore no one else can fact check, correct, or improve upon.
Then, instead of being posted publicly for others to find and searches to index, those answers will disappear into the ether, so that no other users get that answer unless they too do an AI search from the same provider.
And all of this at the expense of every website and content creator who no longer even gets seen in a search engine, let alone page views. At the expense of every writer whose words will never be seen, only thrown in a pile of words and remixed, then vomited back out. And at the expense not the environment that will suffer to power all of this wasteful, needless garbage.
This is going to be a disaster for the internet as a whole, and it’s really sad how many people can’t understand this. Tech bros continue to fundamentally misunderstand what makes the internet valuable isn’t code, it’s humans.
“accurate”
Google Gemini: “Uhh…eat glue I guess?”
No thanks. I’m just going to assume it gets its answers from a random user on Reddit, and I guarantee I’ll be more rational and correctly informed than anyone who relies upon something like GSE’s.
I definitely dont share this author’s techno-optimism but I would agree with that one line about generative AI being a potential solution to the deterioration of traditional SEO-based search. For certain queries, AI is already a faster and less annoying way of reaching the relevant information. Some models are able to provide referencing upon request too. I’m sure there are more ethical ways of improving search results (Kagi’s user-funded search comes to mind) but AI is ultimately going to be the method tbat is pushed to the majority of people.
I’m sure there are more ethical ways of improving search results (Kagi’s user-funded search comes to mind)
Kagi is working on introducing their AI search plans.
I didn’t know, thanks for that. Unfortunate for those who wish to avoid AI.
Actually after looking to their documentation, they already introduced it: https://help.kagi.com/kagi/ai/kagi-ai.html
“AI” doesn’t exist. They’re talking about generative search engines.