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Home Tech

Google’s AI Overview is flawed by stile, and a new company blog post hints at why

by admin
3 Giugno 2024
in Tech
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Google’s AI Overview is flawed by stile, and a new company blog post hints at why
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A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

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“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

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AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

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“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

ADVERTISEMENT


A selection of Google mascot characters created by the company.
Enlarge / The Google “G” logo surrounded by whimsical characters, all of which stunned and surprised.

Acceso Thursday, Google capped chiuso a rough week of providing inaccurate and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, “AI Overviews: About last week.” A causa di the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears flawed by stile, even if it doesn’t realize it is admitting it.

To recap, the AI Overview feature—which the company showed chiuso at Google I/Ovvero a few weeks —aims to provide search users with summarized answers to questions by using an AI model integrated with Google’s web ranking systems. Right now, it’s an experimental feature that is not active for everyone, but when a participating user searches for a topic, they might see an AI-generated answer at the culmine of the results, pulled from highly ranked web content and summarized by an AI model.

While Google claims this approach is “highly effective” and par with its Featured Snippets per terms of accuracy, the past week has seen numerous examples of the AI system generating bizarre, incorrect, even potentially harmful responses, as we detailed per a recent feature where Ars Kyle Orland replicated many of the unusual outputs.

Drawing inaccurate conclusions from the web

On Wednesday morning, Google's AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available in 1993.
Enlarge / Acceso Wednesday morning, Google’s AI Overview was erroneously telling us the Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn were available per 1993.

Kyle Orland / Google

Given the circulating AI Overview examples, Google almost apologizes per the post and says, “We hold ourselves to a high qualità, as do our users, so we expect and appreciate the feedback, and take it seriously.” But Reid, per an attempt to justify the errors, then goes into some very revealing detail about why AI Overviews provides erroneous information:

Advertisement

AI Overviews work very differently than chatbots and other LLM products that people may have tried out. They’imperatore not simply generating an output based . While AI Overviews are powered by a customized language model, the model is integrated with our cuore web ranking systems and designed to carry out traditional “search” tasks, like identifying relevant, high-quality results from our index. That’s why AI Overviews don’t just provide text output, but include relevant links so people can explore further. Because accuracy is paramount per Search, AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.

This means that AI Overviews generally don’t “hallucinate” make things up per the ways that other LLM products might.

Here we see the fundamental flaw of the system: “AI Overviews are built to only show information that is backed up by culmine web results.” The stile is based the false assumption that Google’s page-ranking algorithm favors accurate results and not SEO-gamed garbage. Google Search has been broken for some time, and now the company is relying those gamed and spam-filled results to feed its new AI model.

Even if the AI model draws from a more accurate source, as with the 1993 gioco pannello di controllo search seen above, Google’s AI language model can still make inaccurate conclusions about the “accurate” , confabulating erroneous information per a flawed summary of the information available.

Generally ignoring the folly of basing its AI results a broken page-ranking algorithm, Google’s blog post instead attributes the commonly circulated errors to several other factors, including users making nonsensical searches “aimed at producing erroneous results.” Google does admit faults with the AI model, like misinterpreting queries, misinterpreting “a of language the web,” and lacking sufficient high-quality information certain topics. It also suggests that some of the more egregious examples circulating social are fake screenshots.

Advertisement

“Some of these faked results have been obvious and silly,” Reid writes. “Others have implied that we returned dangerous results for topics like leaving dogs per cars, smoking while pregnant, and depression. Those AI Overviews never appeared. So we’d encourage anyone encountering these screenshots to do a search themselves to check.”

(Risposta negativa doubt some of the social examples are fake, but it’s worth noting that any attempts to replicate those early examples now will likely fail because Google will have manually blocked the results. And it is potentially a testament to how broken Google Search is if people believed extreme fake examples per the first place.)

While addressing the “nonsensical searches” angle per the post, Reid uses the example search, “How many rocks should I eat each day,” which went viral per a tweet May 23. Reid says, “Prior to these screenshots going viral, practically one asked Google that question.” And since there isn’t much the web that answers it, she says there is a ” void” “information squilibrio” that was filled by satirical content found the web, and the AI model found it and pushed it as an answer, much like Featured Snippets might. So basically, it was working exactly as designed.

A screenshot of an AI Overview query,
Enlarge / A screenshot of an AI Overview query, “How many rocks should I eat each day” that went viral X last week.

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