I've been using Google Search for 25 years and AI overview is the one thing that could ruin it for me

Frustration
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Google is search. It has competitors, but they're like barnacles on the base of a mighty ship, slicing through the internet. No one does search better and yet, Google insists on mucking up its stellar results with, naturally, artificial intelligence.

If you know me – and by now I assume you do – I'm no Luddite. I love new technology and am especially intrigued by AI, which I've been covering for almost 20 years. Granted the last two years have been almost nothing like the preceding 18, where AI was understood as a powerful and growing tech sector that could automate processes, manage simple tasks behind the scenes, and to a very limited degree power chatbot conversations.

"Google is the first place I go when I want to find something on the web or figure out virtually anything. I not only type search terms into Google, I regularly ask it questions—and it nearly always has the answers." That is what I wrote 21 years ago about the then-still relatively new search engine.

Already the best

Google Search results AI Overview

(Image credit: Future)

Google was always good enough at search and, for a long time, miles ahead of the competition. In recent years, Microsoft Bing, which takes a more subtle approach to AI integration, by the way), has closed a lot of the gap – though I still think Google is better. Or I did.

Now, we have AI Overviews. Powered by Google Gemini, AI Overviews take the vast number of results you'd receive for any query and boil them down into a more digestible summary. Google still considers AI overviews an experimental feature, which is why you don't always see them. 95% of my search results do not include them. I wonder if we all see fewer of them because the initial results were often wrong or bizarre.

The wrongness is one problem, but it's not my issue. My concern is about why we need AI Overviews at all. It occurs to me that highlighting AI on a search result in this way is a fundamental misunderstanding of the purpose of online search – and it's coming from the King of Search.

AI Overview reminds me of a smart kid in class constantly raising their hand to show you how smart they are. I don't blame them for being smart, but you can achieve the same result by acing your tests and not making everyone else feel like idiots (this is a lesson I did not learn soon enough in grade school).

AI Overview is Google showing off. Yes, its AI is smart and powerful, but AI's purpose is not to be a showpiece or some kind of search and summarization magic trick. Google should be using AI to enhance the quality of its results without remaking them to showcase AI. 

What I see is a giant search company so concerned about competition from Microsoft and Copilot that it felt the need to put AI Overviews results above its best product: search results. And you know what that does, right? It pushes search results further down the page, and depending on the screen (desktop or mobile), you might not even see the traditional results.

Get out of my way

Google Search Results AI Overview

If Google is going to insert something silly (borderline offensive) like "Properly as a girl" then it better dispense with the AI Overview and get to the real results as quickly as possible. (Image credit: Future)

The other day, my adult son was on his phone searching and started cursing at his phone: "No, I don't want an AI overview. Get this thing out of the way." Of course, he cast a glance in my direction as if I had something to do with it. My family often blames me for all tech foibles because I'm "in the industry".

In this case, I agree with my son. There is simply no need to show AI Overviews when the current results are so good and accurate. I'm not even getting into the issue of how pushing down these results is going to hurt (or kill) the content creators who've supported the search engine for a generation. Your search engine is nothing without our information...but that's a different post.

What concerns me is that Google seems unaware that its efforts to keep up with the competition could hurt its most valuable product. People want search results and nothing else. Give them that, and they'll be Google search customers forever. Force them to scroll through AI Overviews, and you will lose them to the competition.

The answer is simple, Google can remain the leader if it takes the Gemni AI smarts and uses them to improve search results but without showing anyone how it's doing so. If Gemini is only allowed to trade in facts, this could make Google Search even more effective, and that's a win for Google and a win for its fans who just want to Google.

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Lance Ulanoff
Editor At Large

A 38-year industry veteran and award-winning journalist, Lance has covered technology since PCs were the size of suitcases and “on line” meant “waiting.” He’s a former Lifewire Editor-in-Chief, Mashable Editor-in-Chief, and, before that, Editor in Chief of PCMag.com and Senior Vice President of Content for Ziff Davis, Inc. He also wrote a popular, weekly tech column for Medium called The Upgrade.


Lance Ulanoff makes frequent appearances on national, international, and local news programs including Live with Kelly and Mark, the Today Show, Good Morning America, CNBC, CNN, and the BBC.