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Retro Gaming YouTube Channel Slope's Game Room Is at Risk of Deletion

https://www.timeextension.com/news/2025/06/i-am-petrified-retro-gaming-youtube-channel-slopes-game-room-is-at-risk-of-deletion
1•speeder•56s ago•0 comments

Show HN: Ask WWDC – Find the WWDC session you're looking for

https://askwwdc.com
1•mattspear•1m ago•0 comments

Out of Pocket and into the Wallabag

https://lwn.net/Articles/1022399/
1•sohkamyung•4m ago•0 comments

Tales of the C: Retro Thoughts on the Seemingly Eternal Programming Language

https://www.goto10retro.com/p/tales-of-the-c-retro-thoughts-on
1•klelatti•7m ago•0 comments

DoHoT: Making practical use of DNS over HTTPS over Tor

https://github.com/alecmuffett/dohot
1•DyslexicAtheist•12m ago•0 comments

macOS Tahoe brings a new disk image format

https://eclecticlight.co/2025/06/12/macos-tahoe-brings-a-new-disk-image-format/
1•frizlab•12m ago•0 comments

Programming Beyond Practices (2016) [pdf]

https://notes.skillstopractice.com/pbp.pdf
1•asicsp•13m ago•0 comments

Could an LLM Create a Full Domain-Specific Language?

https://modeling-languages.com/vibe-dsling/
1•todsacerdoti•19m ago•0 comments

The man who ran a marathon in the middle of a baseball game

https://www.mlb.com/news/seigo-masubuchi-runs-marathon-during-st-paul-saints-game
1•austinallegro•21m ago•0 comments

Wood Away: Strategic Puzzle Mobile Game – Video Tutorial Collection

https://woodaway.net
1•wsljhint•22m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: If you code on a beach or at a bar, what do you use?

1•noduerme•25m ago•2 comments

How the Historical Dictionary of Switzerland modernized their entire platform

https://xwiki.com/en/webinars/How-HLS-modernized-with-XWiki
1•lorinab•28m ago•1 comments

AI Boom Drives 150% Surge in Indirect Emissions at Major Tech Firms, UN Warns

https://esgnews.com/ai-boom-drives-150-surge-in-indirect-emissions-at-major-tech-firms-un-warns/
2•todsacerdoti•29m ago•0 comments

Linus Torvalds Rejects the Idea of Enabling Damon by Default in the Linux Kernel

https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-DAMON-By-Default-No
3•todsacerdoti•39m ago•2 comments

Island Southeast Asia – Physical Map

http://www.shadedrelief.com/north-america/
2•marklit•39m ago•0 comments

First Make It Correct

https://blog.daniel-beskin.com/2025-06-10-first-make-it-correct
3•thunderbong•42m ago•1 comments

Coordinated Progress: Seeing the System: The Graph

https://jack-vanlightly.com/blog/2025/6/11/coordinated-progress-part-1
1•pramodbiligiri•42m ago•0 comments

SmartAttack: Air-Gap Attack via Smartwatches

https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.08866
2•talboren•49m ago•0 comments

Firebird.ai teaming up with Armenian Telco to build $500M Nvidia Blackwell Cloud

https://apnews.com/press-release/ein-presswire-newsmatics/firebird-announces-plans-to-deploy-thousands-of-nvidia-blackwell-gpus-to-advance-ai-computing-across-the-caucasus-region-a0bce4506f3ae00f11e88a1f573803db
1•vachi•52m ago•1 comments

Hole People: Strategic Puzzle Mobile Game – Video Tutorial Collection

https://holepeople.net
1•websellcn•59m ago•0 comments

Text-to-LoRA: Instant Transformer Adaption

https://www.arxiv.org/pdf/2506.06105
2•yurimo•1h ago•1 comments

Apple Retreats

https://stratechery.com/2025/apple-retreats/
2•mitchbob•1h ago•0 comments

LLMs Can Write Efficient CUDA Kernels

https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.09092
2•MukundMohanK•1h ago•0 comments

Chrome MCP: Open-source plugin to let any chatbot control your Chrome

https://github.com/hangwin/mcp-chrome
2•hangye•1h ago•0 comments

Michael Truell(CEO, Cursor) on betting everything on a world beyond code

https://twitter.com/ycombinator/status/1932801405229953329
2•babushkaboi•1h ago•0 comments

Disney, Universal File First Major Studio Lawsuit Against AI Company Midjourney

https://variety.com/2025/digital/news/disney-nbcuniversal-studio-lawsuit-ai-midjourney-copyright-infringement-1236428188/
1•lastdong•1h ago•0 comments

Quantity Kills

https://iainmcgilchrist.substack.com/p/quantity-kills
1•walterbell•1h ago•0 comments

Is the 'tech bro-ification' of abortion here?

https://prismreports.org/2025/06/11/abortion-tech-repro-workers/
2•Improvement•1h ago•0 comments

The Highest Form of Culinary Reverence: Ikizukuri

https://wami-japan.com/article/2381/
2•Ch00k•1h ago•0 comments

GM's silent about-face from EV production after losing $6B

https://www.carsandhorsepower.com/news/profit-over-prophecy-how-gm-s-6-billion-income-drop-forced-its-ev-retreat
3•Anumbia•1h ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Chatbots are replacing Google's search, devastating traffic for some publishers

https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/google-ai-news-publishers-7e687141
197•jaredwiener•1d ago

Comments

JKCalhoun•1d ago
https://archive.ph/W9K4V
mitchbob•1d ago
Previously discussed: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44235951
Tarsul•1d ago
Anyone surprised? I mean that's just what Google does and did from the very early days. I am more ashamed that politicians worldwide have done basically nothing to help media companies in the last 25 years.

We can always ask ourselves: What is more important for our society: independent media or our search overlords?

triceratops•1d ago
> politicians worldwide have done basically nothing to help media companies

Is that really surprising? Good journalists consider it their job to hold politicians accountable.

Tarsul•1d ago
but that cuts both ways. They hold not only your own party accountable but also the other parties. Thus, if you are a politican that has a moral compass and believe you are the one who does the best job, then you would like a well-respected media organisation because you would think that it hits the other guys more often than yourself.

But yes.. this only works so long as the amount of politicans with a moral compass are a majority... the moment this changes is the moment that the media is the enemy.

rightbyte•1d ago
Google is doing some sort of LLM copyright laundering. The earlier version was bad for the sites but with the new one most likely decreases click throughs even more.
rmah•1d ago
Why should they help media companies?
junto•1d ago
I think that’s a good question. If they did their jobs properly, acting as the 4th estate, then I’d be much more supportive.

However the last action I can remember that fulfilled checks and counterbalances was the publication of the Snowden files. After that the press died and it’s never recovered.

Journalists are too scared and media companies neutered, and no longer have what it takes to call out the executive.

Spivak•1d ago
I mean Fox News seemed to be pretty darn good at calling out Biden and made it their personal mission to hate everything Obama touched. Why aren't people comfortable calling out Trump? Because he's made it clear he will and has retaliated against anyone who does.

We've implicitly relied on the "courtesy" of the executive to just sit there and take it for the good of the country and public discussion. But now that time seems to have passed. No more high road and turning the other cheek.

fumar•1d ago
Manufacturing consent from the media owners owners.
xboxnolifes•1d ago
> Why aren't people comfortable calling out Trump?

I feel like all the new I ever see is calling out Trump. I don't think it's doing anything though.

skywhopper•1d ago
They have to get the content they repurpose without permission from somewhere.
tehjoker•1d ago
There should be a national media company. Instead we have national media companies with no democratic oversight and labor abuse.
tqi•1d ago
You mean like NPR?
tehjoker•1d ago
NPR is funded by private donations too and doesn't do enough on-the-ground reporting. It would need significantly more funding to achieve this level of functionality.
teeray•1d ago
Because an informed public helps the proper functioning of a democracy (I know, I know, it’s a hilarious thing to say in the US)
holoduke•1d ago
What? Media companies sold their souls to big capital and Journalists write to serve engagement.
ekianjo•1d ago
Media companies are heavily subsidized everywhere in the world and that's precisely because of politicians.
bamboozled•1d ago
Politicians hate Media companies, sometimes they deserve the hate but there is almost no reality where having accurate, objective news reporting is beneficial for politicians.
DaSHacka•1d ago
> there is almost no reality where having accurate, objective news reporting is beneficial for politicians.

Well it's a good thing for politicians they haven't had to deal with that for a long, long time.

asadotzler•1d ago
Google used to send traffic to my site. Now it scrapes my site and serves summaries of my site on its site, sending me zero human traffic but a whole lot of expensive bot traffic.
jaredwiener•1d ago
Honest question as I try to wrap my millennial brain around this --

for those of you who search for news -- with or without an AI -- what are you searching for? So much of news is finding out the unknown, it seems unsearchable by nature? Or are you asking for updates to a specific, ongoing story?

1bpp•1d ago
Updates on a specific topic, region, company, or ongoing story.
Celeo•1d ago
Generally, if I'm manually searching for news, it's either to get more information about something I heard from someone (searching by the event), or to see if news has been published about something nearby (searching by region).
bigthymer•1d ago
Sometimes I look for a specific old article. Search is completely useless for this since it usually ignores what I'm searching for to show me more about whatever is recent.
dreghgh•1d ago
I would assume a lot of what is losing views on news sites are the articles designed to capture "what time is the super bowl" type searches. The article features the question in the title or standfirst, the answer comes after 3 paragraphs of low value information about the super bowl.
Baader-Meinhof•1d ago
I ask two types of questions:

1. Factual updates to an ongoing or recent story.

2. Analysis, e.g. "What were the economic effects of Brexit."

Without AI, I would try to read multiple opinions from different sides. But its hard for me to always know which experts to trust?

AI will present both sides, but even when AI is not hallucinating, there is still the issue of "are the experts that the AI is sourcing reliable?"

chgs•1d ago
Do you trust an ai run by a shady company but not an attributable human editor.
mlinhares•1d ago
We’re so cooked, all the thinking outsourced to LLMs.
Baader-Meinhof•1d ago
I think you have an outdated understanding of AI workflow. They generally cite their sources, which you should check, just like regular search.
ambicapter•1d ago
The source is not what’s convincing you, it’s the way the ai is presenting you the information. The source just confirms what you’re already thinking at that point (what the ai has just presented to you). You’re still trusting the ai.
retsibsi•1d ago
That may be true of the average user, but you have no way of knowing it's true of the person you replied to. It's 100% possible to check the sources properly, and form your beliefs accordingly, if you want to.
rozap•1d ago
Yes, the AI is trained on a vast quantity of data therefore it is less likely to be manipulated vs a single editor that may have ulterior motives. Therefore it's much harder to manipulate. A corporation which represents many shareholders' interest has its own reputation on the line, which would be seriously damaged if they were caught doing anything like you suggest.

But this can only be understood within the context of the white genocide currently happening in South Africa. Some are saying it's not real, but there have been documented attacks on farms and chants of "kill the boer".

throw_m239339•1d ago
> Yes, the AI is trained on a vast quantity of data therefore it is less likely to be manipulated vs a single editor that may have ulterior motives.

Gemini was caught stuffing prompts with "custom" keywords on certain requests, so there is still an editor between you and the AI.

rozap•1d ago
Read my whole comment :)
marcus_holmes•1d ago
I see what you did there :)
yibg•1d ago
I've been taking a look at my own news consumption patterns and how they've changed. One thing I noticed is previously, news was going to a paper / news site and seeing what's "new". Lately I more and more find myself first getting a glimpse of the topic from other sources (e.g. Tiktok) first, and then going to a new site to either get more details or confirm (since it's hard to tell now if a piece of content is reliable or not).

So basically news sites for me is now less about finding out new information, but rather as a secondary source to get more details or a more "professional" account of something.

hellisothers•9h ago
I “search” (using this word liberally here) by using a newsreader and adding sources to it over time that I find to have a high signal (whether I agree with them or not). This way new things come to me without having to explicitly look for them, often before others have heard about it, usually from several different angles. If I have to explicitly go search for something the results are usually low signal chum :(
OutOfHere•1d ago
I think that requiring PoW (proof-of-work) could take over for simple requests, rejecting requests until a sufficient nonce is included in the request. Unfortunately, this collective PoW could burden power grids even more, wasting energy+money+computation for transmission. Such is life. It would be a lot better to just upgrade the servers, but that's never going to be sufficient.
daedrdev•1d ago
what?
GuB-42•1d ago
Worse than that. Such computations are nothing to a desktop computer, or a server in a datacenter. But they are definitely going to be a problem for cheap smartphones.

Ironically, the computers that are the best suited for solving these proof-of-work problem are the same kind of computers that are used to train and run AIs.

And for even more irony, chatbots are relatively lightweight on the client side, being just text, while news sites tend to be bloated even without considering PoW.

So there is a good chance for PoW not to affect AI scrapers much (they have powerful computers to solve the challenges) while driving away smartphone users towards chatbots and other AI-based summaries.

OutOfHere•1d ago
If the PoW difficulty is IP or subnet specific, then the IP addresses or subnets that hammer the server more can be given increasingly greater PoW requirements. The smartphones, assuming they're not being used as proxies, will have few requests, so the server can go very easy on them with the PoW difficulty.
crest•1d ago
How ironic that the WSJ decided to make the text unreadable themselves just in case anyone cared to read it.
spankalee•1d ago
Google's damned if they do and damned if the don't here:

- If they don't make search AI centric, they're going to get lapped by AI-first competitors like Perplexity, OpenAI, etc. We saw many people here predict Google's pending demise from this. - If they do make search centric, they're unfairly consuming they world's content and hoarding the user traffic to themselves.

Since no reasonable company is just going to stand by and willing let itself be obsoleted, Google's obviously going to go for option 2. But had they for some reason stood down, then they would have been supplanted by an AI competitor and the headline would read "News Sites Are Getting Crushed by Perplexity" - just a few years later.

vgeek•1d ago
We are getting to watch The Innovator's Dilemma play out, yet again. The downward trajectory of Google's utility has only been worsening over the past 10 years-- but only in the last 3-4 have mainstream audiences started to notice.
bitpush•1d ago
The first part of that statement is valid but the second one isn't.

If anything, most of big tech has shown exceptional humility against new threats

Instagram incorporating stories (Snapchat)

YouTube incorporating Shorts (tiktok)

Google search incorporating AI Mode (perplexity et al)

This is in stark contrast to Kodak and the likes who scoffed at digital camera and phone cameras as distraction. They were sure that their ways were superior, ultimately leading to their demise.

vgeek•1d ago
Maybe you misunderstood the scope that Google is a search advertising company first and foremost? Alphabet ignores (yes, they essentially invented transformers, etc.., but actual productive efforts likely correlate to predicted TAM or protecting status quo, answering to shareholders while waiting to acquire threats) a market that will eventually usurp their cash cow of first party search ads, because the new market isn't initially as lucrative due to market size. There is also the consideration of cannibalizing their high margin search ads market with an error prone and resource intensive tech that cannot immediately be monetized in a second price auction (both from inventory and bidder participant perspectives). A $10 billion market for Google would be under 3% of revenue, but if the market grows 10x, it is much more attractive, but now the incumbent may be trailing the nascent companies who refined their offerings (without risk of cannibalizing their own offerings) while said market was growing. We are currently at the stage where Google is incorporating Gemini responses and alienating publishers (by not sending monetizable clicks while using their content) while still focusing on monetization via their traditional ad products elsewhere on the SERPs (text search ads, shopping ads). Keep in mind, they also control 3rd party display ads via DoubleClick and Adsense-- but inventory on 3rd party sites will drop and Google will lose their 30%+ cut if users don't leave the SERPs.

Dozens of major news publications have covered the decline of Google's organic search quality decline and emphasis on monetization (ignoring incorrect infoboxes and AI generated answers). See articles such as https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2023/09/googl... and a collection even posted here on HN https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30348460 . This has played into reasons why people have shifted away from Google. Their results are focused solely on maximizing Google's earnings per mille, as leaked (https://www.wsj.com/tech/u-s-urges-breakup-of-google-ad-busi...) where the ads team has guanxi over search quality. Once Amit Singhal and Matt Cutts left their roles, the focus on monetization over useful SERPs becomes much more evident.

tehjoker•1d ago
A simple tale of how capitalism leads to unintended anti-social consequences through market mechanisms that no one participant can control.
msgodel•1d ago
For anything important I always ask LLMs for links and follow them. I think this will probably just create a strong incentive to cover important things and move away from clickbait.

It's probably a win for everyone in the long run although it means news sites will have to change. That's going to be painful for them but it's not like they're angels either.

onlyrealcuzzo•1d ago
> I think this will probably just create a strong incentive to cover important things and move away from clickbait.

But clickbait is how they make money...

That's like saying, "Oh, Apple will just have to move away from selling the iPhone and start selling hamburgers instead."

I mean, sure, but they're not going to like it, and it's going to come with a lot of lost revenue and profits.

I find myself regularly copying URLs, sending it to Gemini, and asking it to answer what I want to get out of the article.

I'm not wasting my time scrolling through a mile of website and 88,000 ads to find the answer to the headline.

chgs•1d ago
Those adverts and clickbait will infect llms soon enough, just be far harder to block.
nitwit005•1d ago
Yes, unfortunately for those saying AIs will only get better, advertising is a major reason we should expect them to get worse.
techjamie•1d ago
Ironically, I wonder if it would inspire a slew of downstream services that use LLMs to clean advertising out of the mainstream LLM responses.
downsplat•1d ago
With the huge usage that LLM APIs are getting in all sorts of industries, they cannot be going away, and they're cheap.

If consumer AI chatbots get enshittified, you can just grab some open source bring-your-api-keys front-end, and chat away for peanuts without ads or anything anti-user.

I use https://github.com/sigoden/aichat , but there are GUIs too.

Plus, anyone enterprising can just write a web front-end and sell it as "the ad-free AI chatbot, only $10/mo, usage limits apply".

input_sh•1d ago
And what happens when you follow them?

In my experience, the answers tend to be sourced from fringe little blogs that I would never trust in a Google search.

Google at least attempts to rank them by quality, while LLM web search seems to click on the closest match regardless of the (lack of) quality.

msgodel•1d ago
Huh that's strange to hear. The HN I remember would have always said the opposite (the small web tends to be higher quality) as do I.
yummypaint•1d ago
I'm surprised the links work for you at all. 90+% of citations for non trivial information (i.e. not in a text book but definitely in the literature) I've gotten from LLMs have been very convincing hallucinations. The year and journal volume will match, the author will be someone who plausibly would have written on the topic, but the articles don't exist and never did. It's a tremendous waste of time and energy compared to old fashioned library search tools.
im3w1l•21h ago
One thing I did once with great success was asking chatgpt something like "I'm trying to find information about X, but when I Google it I just get results about the app named after X. Can you suggest a better query?"

X was some tehnical thing I didn't know a lot about so it gave me some more words to narrow down the query that I would not have known about myself. And that really helped me find the information I needed.

It also threw in some book tips for good measure.

So yeah I can highly recommend this workflow.

stefan_•1d ago
Spare us the "woe is me" for they literally invented replacing the publishers. Yesterday its infoboxes, today its shitty AI summaries. Which is still the case, so good riddance.
bitpush•1d ago
What is infobox?
juujian•1d ago
The one way forward for them would have been to maintain their quality, but they decided to cash in on their monopoly instead. Peak short-termis.
ajross•1d ago
Seems to my untrained eyes like Google's AI search is actually the best on the market, no? Seems like a lot of HN users have trained themselves not to type queries into the search prompt anymore and then complain about the quality of a product they don't use.
marcus_holmes•1d ago
Possibly their AI search - I don't know, I switched to Kagi to get a search engine that actually did what I asked instead of just trying to put as many ads in front of me as it could.
chneu•1d ago
I tried to like Kagi but the UI is awful and the results were often way off from what was relevant. Then the limitations were pretty lame.
malnourish•23h ago
What's wrong with the UI, what limitations have you experienced? I've found my searches relevant and haven't noticed any limitations.
chneu•23h ago
The paywall. I'm not against paying, but their free tier limitations are way too low.

The UI is just horrible and a huge waste of space. I had to use a user style to make it a non-headache to use.

Kagi routinely lacks results that every other search engine I use get no problem. I can't give any examples but I found myself going to page 5+ more often on Kagi than any other service.

OskarS•18h ago
If the paywall bothers you, then Kagi just isn't for you, the whole point of it is to have a business model where the users are customers, not the product.

I have no problem with the UI. It's snappy, clean, doesn't have a bunch of cruft, it's easy to find results, etc. It feels like Google of yore.

Same thing with the search results, I find them really excellent. In my experience, there's much less SEO spam. If you search for a programming language function, you get links to the proper documentation, not some trash "geeksforgeeks" site or whatever. I can't remember if I've ever had to go past page one.

Obviously YMMV on that, it's entirely possible it's different depending on what you're searching for. But I'm very happy paying for Kagi, and will continue to do so.

dyauspitr•23h ago
Kagi is okay. Decided to try it after all the hearsay on HN and it was severely underwhelming.
bcoates•1d ago
Every once in a while I bother not ignoring a Google AI overview, then I waste some time fact-checking it and find out it's wrong. Most recently about a python library (where it hallucinated a function that doesn't exist, complete with documentation and usage examples) and breaking news (where it authoritatively said [non-culture war, non-controversial, local] thing doesn't happen, above a dog-bites-man story from a conventional news source about how thing happened again)
ajross•1d ago
> Every once in a while

Pretty much what I said, no? You don't use the product and when you do, do it through a filter[1] where you only remember the bugs. Do you use other AI search products and find that they don't show this behavior?

[1] I mean, come on: framing it as "bother not ignoring" is just a dead giveaway that you aren't doing a product evaluation in good faith!

bcoates•1d ago
I am doing the review in good faith though--by default, I scroll past to the first result, then if it seems unsuitable and I'm desperate enough I check the LLM thingy. If it were providing any value it would sometimes be both novel and correct.

Usually it's non-novel (correctly-harmelessly but unhelpfully, restating the web search results). When it's novel it's because it's wrong.

I would remember the situation where reading the LLM thingy added any value if it ever happened. The weird little UI thing they do where they only show the LLM result if you wait for it to render makes this very easy, I have to scroll up to even consider it.

chneu•1d ago
I think you're also showing some bias.

People are now changing how they search and gather information to use AI. You're automatically discounting that person's experience because they avoid using AI for valid reasons. A lot of times Google AI is outright wrong, not even close to correct. It makes sense to not rely on it and only going back to see if it's improved.

I don't "ignore AI". I just haven't changed how I search and gather information because it's clearly not accurate yet. I still have to fact check it which negates the benefits(time saving). Occasionally I go back to see if it's improved and usually it hasn't. That's not bias.

danielrico•1d ago
My experience with Gemini in AI studio mirrors what the AI overview shows. An hallucinated libraries and their internal reasoning dialogue reinforcing the hallucination and saying "the user don't know how to search on pipy".
waldrews•1d ago
The model that's doing AI Summary for search results - that presumably needs to be fast and cheap because of the scale - is still sufficiently bad as to give people a bad taste. Presumably they're frantically working to scale their better models for this use case. If you could get Gemini Pro on every search result the experience would be effectively perfect (in the sense of better error rates than what a non-specialist educated human reading the top results and summarizing them would achieve). That's years away from a scaling/cost/speed perspective.
zdragnar•1d ago
I've been pleasantly surprised at the quality of the answers, but they've been wrong enough that I'll never not double check them anyway.
flokie•1d ago
In the US (to start) there's now a flavor of Gemini 2.5 to power Search experiences like AI Mode and AI Overviews. Should be sufficiently good at this point.

source: https://blog.google/products/search/google-search-ai-mode-up...

bionhoward•1d ago
One funny thing about Google summaries is “copy text” merges all of the links into a giant blob which gets interpreted as a single extremely long broken link. Not a great sign for attention to detail if they don’t even copy their own pasta (it’s been like this for months)
WorldMaker•14h ago
Having reluctantly used both, Bing's Copilot seems a lot more grounded on current search results below it versus Google's Gemini seems a lot more likely to conduct its own searches from a different query than what was asked, so also a lot more likely to hallucinate things or to provide answers that seem way different from the rest of the search page.

In terms of "best on the market" for AI search, I know that I am much more likely to trust the one that seems more like a direct summary of the stuff the search engine is traditionally responding with (and presumably has been well tuned in the last several decades) versus the one more likely to make stuff up or to leave the realm of what you are actually asking for some other search it thinks is better for you.

Though admittedly that's a very personal judgment call; some people want the assistant to search for "what they really mean" rather than "what they asked for". It's also a lot of gut vibes from how these AIs write about their research and some of that can be hallucinations and lies and "prompt optimization" as much or more than any sort of "best on the market" criteria.

dyauspitr•23h ago
That’s a cheap argument. Even with high quality results (which I still think Google is the best at), LLMs are infinitely easier to use.
marcuschong•1d ago
It's funny most people are saying Google will win the AI wars, though that is precisely what will cannibalize their current business model, which had a much bigger moat than frontier LLMs, apparently.
w-ll•1d ago
You think we wont start seeing ads or paid for refs/links in those AI responses? Not defending Google here, when they turned that feature on I posted to some friends "another nail in the coffin for the web as we know it" or something to that effect.
lostmsu•1d ago
Eventually open models will be able to do the same, so why would anyone use ad-ridden service? The first LLM provider who turns on ads on their responses will disappear in a brink.
olyjohn•1d ago
People use, and pay for, ad-ridden services all the time. I mean, just look at Cable TV and the direction all the streaming services are going.
lostmsu•1d ago
Provided there are no identical alternatives without ads.
bitpush•1d ago
Data won't be open and free for scraping in the future. And news worthy sites will ask for $$.

So nope, open models won't be a threat in the future.

_flux•23h ago
It will take a long time until an average person has the resources to run models of similar quality (and speed) as Google and OpenAI can provide today.
lostmsu•18h ago
It took under a year last time.
bgwalter•1d ago
They could simply restore the search quality they had in 2010. No one wants these "AI" summaries except for people looking to get promoted for "having an impact" inside Google.

What Google is doing right now is sabotage the search moat they do have. They are throwing it all away because of some "AI" rainmakers inside the company.

ketzo•1d ago
Then what explains people doing millions of web searches on perplexity/chatgpt/claude?
kccqzy•1d ago
That's impossible unless the web reverted back to 2010, when walled gardens weren't prevalent, making your own blog was common, doable and often done by those without programming experience, forums were alive and well, and people wanted to share things on the web rather than group chats.
voxl•1d ago
There are plenty of blogs, plenty of obvious low quality spam to block, plenty of features to enable allowlist and blocklists. To think for a second that the Google search experience couldn't be made significantly better at the snap of a finger by Google is to live in a fantasy world.
ljlolel•1d ago
All that means less revenue, that’s a fantasy
voxl•1d ago
Sure, sure, except for this minor issue that the argument I was responding to didn't mention revenue, they talked about the state of the internet. So why again are you responding to my counter with a straw man?
o11c•1d ago
It's perfectly possible if they start downranking sites full of ads.

But an ad company will never do that.

bdangubic•1d ago
they are losing more and more search to “AI.” my 12-year old never uses Google and couple of times I asked her to “Google it” she literally rolled on the floor laughing and called me a “boomer” :)
triceratops•1d ago
I wonder if "boomer" is going to become a generic term for "my parents' generation".
bdangubic•1d ago
100%
irjustin•1d ago
Simply untrue. I don't want it back. I use ChatGPT's voice transcribing to do 99% of my searches today.

Google does need to adapt or die

massysett•1d ago
> No one wants these "AI" summaries

Not true, I use them all the time. They have links available for when I want further information, which is not very often.

userbinator•1d ago
I never use them. Especially when they can be completely wrong (and the problem is how will you know that it's wrong?): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44142113
bdangubic•1d ago
you are linking to “AI responses can make a mistake” post???! Google’s top 86 search results are ads :)
stormfather•16h ago
Is this really that bad for Google? Do Perplexity and OpenAI use paid SERP API under the hood? Google doesn't have to make money from ads on search, if its paid search.
skeaker•13h ago
I never really bought the idea of any AI company killing Google. They have too much momentum to really be seriously impacted, too many people who only use them exclusively and will continue to do so their whole lives on the name brand alone. They might risk a lack of "growth" but that only really matters to shareholders, not to end users.
hadlock•12h ago
Yahoo had 90%+ of the search market and they lost it in a few years to google because they were unable to innovate. I don't think anyone saw that coming. Everyone was building "portals" (remember those? AOL.com? I think verizon.com was one at some point with news and weather) to try and compete with Yahoo's dominance in search. It can happen again. LLM Chat is certainly an existential threat to the googs. Part of the OpenAI lore is that google originally viewed it as a threat to their search/advertising revenue model and defunded it on that basis.

The fact that people are willing to pay for LLM and use it over search seems to indicate that Google's free product isn't as good, and llm chat is better "Enough" that people are willing to pay for it.

skeaker•8h ago
The major flaw in your argument is that Yahoo is still around. They still have tons of traffic, some of the most in the world, just behind Reddit. They are not constantly growing, yes, but that is exactly my point. They have a satisfied userbase who will use them for life as does Google. Neither is going anywhere any time soon. Both make billions of dollars annually.
oytis•1d ago
But... Google's AI summaries are wrong like at least 50% of the time.
blindstitch•1d ago
A lot of the time it's a just a near-verbatim rephrasing of the top result, too.
ThatMedicIsASpy•1d ago
You can help save the planet by asking AI less questions!

Yeah I have 0 trust in the responses I am getting so instead of verifying random claims I'm taking my own turns

bombcar•1d ago
But 95% of the time it doesn’t matter.
physix•1d ago
I read them to get an idea of the quality that the AI produces, but mostly ignore the content after reading and click on to find actual sources, since I don't yet trust that content.

I was thinking that the drop in traffic to news sites is due to AI summaries, which might have the effect of filtering out people who are happy with a snippet. And was postulating that it would have two effects: improving the relevance of those who go to the news site (good) and feeding people with poor quality AI generated information (bad).

But then I tested out various news- ish search terms and never got an AI summary from Google. So I think the primary cause for a drop in traffic to news sites is probably not the AI summary itself.

aucisson_masque•1d ago
Well I didn’t expect some good coming from the ai revolution and yet.

If it helps to annihilate the « news » sites that depended over advertisement to be profitable, that’s great.

Advertisement and journalism should never have been in the same sentence, no one can provide full independent news when you’re at the mercy of advertiser threatening to bail out if you say something bad on them.

jmsdnns•1d ago
Here is Ben Franklin addressing this issue back in 1731 by essentially saying, "that's true, but then how would news ever get printed?"

https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-01-02-00...

aucisson_masque•1d ago
Newspaper really took off during Industrial Revolution, I’m not sure that a 1731 text is pertinent.

On that matter, people used to print newspaper for a variety of different reasons, some were to rally public to an opinion (political parties for instance), some were printed to exerce control over their reader (a factory owner making a newspaper for his employee) and there have always been people who wanted to report facts and get paid for that.

Still today, there are many newspaper and online news that don’t have any advertisement, sponsoring and are in a really good financial situation.

In France, I can think of mediapart (fully online), le canard enchaîné (online and paper). People pay for them because their paper is worth more than just lightening up a barbecue.

jmsdnns•19h ago
No. Printing presses were used for news well before then. That's why Franklin wrote what he wrote in 1731.
mvdtnz•1d ago
How much do you pay for your news?
aucisson_masque•1d ago
8€/months.

It’s as much about paying for news than it is about supporting people doing a great job that is extremely valuable for democracy.

SoftTalker•1d ago
I was thinking about this today. $40/month for home delivery of the NYT. Add in maybe $5/month for postage to pay my bills and other correspondence. That's still less than half what I pay per month for internet. It's tempting to just drop the home internet service and go back to the 1990s way of doing things.
coffeefirst•1d ago
There are two choices here:

1. Create an elite only product that’s way too expensive for the general public.

2. Subsidize the costs of the newsroom with some form of advertising. There’s several of different forms that can take.

That’s the trade off. You can make it but there really is a need for ad supported reporting.

For what it’s worth I’ve been in this business 15 years and can’t name a single incident of your influence scenario. I can’t speak to every outlet in the world but this is not a thing that happens.

aucisson_masque•8h ago
> For what it’s worth I’ve been in this business 15 years and can’t name a single incident of your influence scenario.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_proprietor

Its mostly a business with very little profit, why all these wealthy men buy more and more newspapers ? Media is the third power after politician and justice, it’s a well known fact.

And they don’t need to intervene directly, the lead editor in these companies just know that there are some subject he shouldn’t speak about or speak in a specific way if he wants to keep his job, get bonus, etc.

Believing it doesn’t interfere with the editorial line is naive, they wouldn’t build empire of news media if they couldn’t benefit from it.

mattl•1d ago
News sites have way too much invasive advertising on them, but AI is a scam.

Pay for your news.

teeray•1d ago
But how? I usually have never heard of some publication and literally want to read one article and never visit the site again. I don’t want to whip out my credit card, fill out a form, have a subscription on the books that I have to cancel, just so I can read that one article. I want the web equivalent of an ezPass transponder.
mattl•1d ago
Apple News+ is one way.

Another is what 404media does. You pay $10 a month for no ads and extra stuff.

But yes, I know what you want and sadly there’s nobody doing it yet.

hobs•1d ago
Oh its been done dozens of times, it just always fails.
mattl•1d ago
Yeah, Ted Nelson even talked about it. It requires a level of cooperation that we may see eventually.

What is an article worth to read?

wnevets•1d ago
Google simultaneously making search worse as more people use AI chatbots isn't helping their cause.
dataviz1000•1d ago
Take it to the next level, integrate the chatbot into a browser extension side panel. Let people navigate to websites that contain the information.

This will work. It will allow the chatbot to provide up to the minute data and information from the source. It will allow the user to maintain context -- like a popup dialog allows the user to maintain visual context. And, it will incentivize content creators to curate and provide information and data as people will be visiting their websites.

If anyone thinks this might be a good idea also, I've already laid down the foundation approaching a browser extension side panel as a framework like Electron or Playwright and did the grunt work. [0]

I put the VSCode IPC and other core libraries into this project. The IPC is important because a browser extension with this use case requires looking at a browser as a distributed system of javascript processes that communicate a a dozen different ways

> Environments: Node.js main process, Node.js child process, Node.js worker thread, browser main thread (window), iframe, dedicated Web Worker, Shared Worker, Service Worker, AudioWorklet.

> Communication: fetch/XMLHttpRequest, WebSocket, RTCDataChannel, EventSource, BroadcastChannel, SharedArrayBuffer + Atomics, localStorage storage events, MessageChannel/MessagePort, postMessage/onmessage, Worker.postMessage/worker.onmessage, parentPort.postMessage/parentPort.on('message'), ChildProcess.send/process.on('message'), stdin/stdout streams.

and VSCode provides a protocol interface with only `onMessage` and `send` so I can define my own that are not provided creating a consistent API for communication.

Regardless, I have it working but it needs to be completely rewritten.

[0]https://github.com/adam-s/doomberg-terminal

eikenberry•1d ago
This and many other applications of this sort will depend on AIs becoming ubiquitous, cheap and not metered. Metered access (like most current SAS AIs) will deter these sorts of heavy use cases. Running locally will be best, both for pricing and so you can have it build up context over time.
dataviz1000•1d ago
As an experiment, because p47's social media posts move the markets $60 in a day, and the last thing on Earth I want to be doing is reading them so the system makes an API request for any new ones, then checks for links, video, and images. It uses OpenAI whisper running with transformers.js on the local machine using webgpu for the inference to transcribe the video and audio and image to text for ocr. I tried to do the text generation locally but any decent model although will run caused my Macbook M3 to get so hot I could cook a steak on it while freezing the rendering for the whole computer.

image-to-text and video, audio-to-text works fine, there are lot of uses for text generation that work but to get high quality analysis to see if a social media post might cause the stock market to crash requires sending the data out to an api. If the side panel requires searching for links to navigate to it requires a third party api.

Working with it, I think the next hardware race will be getting these models to run on personal computers in next 2 - 5 years and I have a suspicion Microsoft is ahead of Apple.

_thisdot•1d ago
This is already a thing with Gemini in Chrome[0].

The Browser Company’s new browser, Dia[1], is supposedly another similar product

[0] = https://gemini.google/overview/gemini-in-chrome/?hl=en

[1] = https://www.diabrowser.com/

dataviz1000•1d ago
I wasn't aware of dia browser, thank you for sharing. I've been doing browser automation for a while and have become convinced the way to accomplish human in the middle is to fork Chromium and create a custom browser. However, there is one problem, there are 3.5B Chrome users. Getting someone to install a browser extension is hard enough, a whole new browser much, much more difficult.

I went with experimenting with stock trading as a demo because people need huge incentive and value to make the critical jump to install an app. There is potential for niche curated business intelligence in trading or real estate, for example, where not only providing the chat bot but also time series data embeddings ect.

I'm a little sad because I'm late to this party.

Nevertheless, there needs to incentive also for people to continue to publish the data, ideas, and information so the chatbots are going to have help the content creators help them curate and provide the data by getting users to navigate to the webpages.

I remember reading Google's Search Engine Optimization guide back in 2009 when I built a news publishing website for an industry newpaper. The tone was here is how to optimize your website for google crawlers to help us help you get traffic to your website. Google is nothing without people creating.

rubyfan•1d ago
Who would have thought we’d be looking for a better experience after Google let search turn to a steaming pile of shit filled with spam, popups and clickbait while violating our privacy with every vector possible?!?
iambateman•1d ago
If the vast majority of Google revenue comes from search, and search is under siege, why is the stock so unfazed?

It seems like the market thinks Google will be just fine.

tokioyoyo•1d ago
Ads in AI query results.
onlyrealcuzzo•1d ago
Windows and Office used to make up >90% of Microsoft's revenue, back when Microsoft was the biggest company in the world around DotCom.

Windows especially has been a sinking ship for a decade and yet Microsoft is bigger than ever.

Google is well positioned to monetize LLMs. Cloud, Gemini, and Waymo are all growing and could easily be Fortune 50 companies each within a few years.

Gsuite continues to do well.

Google Search revenue was still growing as of last quarter.

It's possible for Search revenue to still grow while Google Search total market share of search (if including LLM "search") goes down drastically (LLM users search more, not less).

It's also possible that total traditional Google Search volume could decline substantially without a huge impact to Search revenues.

Remember, only about ~15% of searches are Monetized. Google will be focused on keeping THOSE searches going.

It's possible Google could lose TONS of marketshare and still keep the frothiest part of the market...

OpenAI could take off more than any expects and be the biggest company in the world, and it's possible that only takes a small dent out of Search.

It's also possible Google could end up having a significant (if not dominant) part of the LLM search market.

TulliusCicero•1d ago
Waymo is a particularly good one. Yes, it's been harder and taken longer than expected to get cars self driving, but it's starting to show real results now, and the sheer difficulty could act as quite the moat -- right now in the Western world, nobody is even close to Waymo in operational L4 or higher self driving cars, and the incumbent automakers in particular seem to have mostly given up.

And it's not just that Waymo will inevitably expand beyond robotaxis into personal cars as well, they could take their expertise in vision and robotics and apply it to adjacent domains. Maybe we'll actually start seeing the humanoid helper robots of the 50's a decade or two from now!

iambateman•18h ago
This is interesting, thanks. Thinking about the share of monetized searches is helpful.
rglover•1d ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Market
paradox460•1d ago
I don't use Google anymore, and haven't in over a year (I use kagi instead) but for finding information that could be buried deep within slow, ad ridden websites, the AI and quick question features are indispensable. Things like "is game XYZ available on gamepass" or "which is state is comparable in area to germany" are good examples of this
bitpush•1d ago
Does Kagi have AI Mode?
ac29•1d ago
Kagi assistant is hybrid search / LLM
bitpush•1d ago
What model are they using?
jgeurts•1d ago
They offer most models from the large AI players (anthropic, openai, mistral, meta, grok, google, deepseek)
bitpush•1d ago
Why would you use Kagi instead of any of these models directly?
lostdesign•1d ago
convenience through a UI?
paradox460•9h ago
You get all of them for the price of one kagi sub instead of a half dozen subs
greazy•8h ago
They're also free.
paradox460•9h ago
They have a few interfaces that you can trigger an AI answer through

The first, and most useful to me, is when you just append a ? to your query. This pops up the answer in an info box at the top of a search, and then shows related results below

The second is the assistant mode, which pops up either when you use the continuing link at the bottom of an info box, or trigger it directly via the assistant URL. This is the standard conversational interface

awongh•1d ago
I was considering starting a business where the main traffic source would be SEO based, but based on all the gloom and doom around search I decided to hold off.

Hard to say exactly how bad it’s getting right now. Lots of horror stories out there.

bcoates•1d ago
Honestly that might be a mistake, when the consensus is greedy get scared and when it's scared get greedy
mmanfrin•1d ago
I built a protein comparison site (aggregating nutrition, ingredients, electrolytes, prices) and I expected a little bit of traffic, but I'm getting less than a single visitor every 2 days from google. It's absolutely dead.

A year ago I threw together a tiny little site with some datamined assets from a game (deadlock) that randomly got indexed and saw a couple hundred visits a month from google.

amarant•1d ago
Honestly, it's at least partially on the publishers in this case.

I've started using AI to summarise articles for me because the endless SEO fluff has gotten to completely unbearable levels.

If you publish an article with a sidetrack that's 8 pages long and completely irrelevant, don't get upset when I have some LLM summarize it to 3 bullet points instead. I'm not made of time, nor patience!

Hobadee•1d ago
This one trick will cut down on listicles and click-bait!
Agingcoder•1d ago
I don’t really care about google’s ai features - I’m fine with regular old fashioned search engines. I’ve stopped using google because it doesn’t work anymore - I used to be able to find what I want , and now I can’t. Everything is lost in a mess of ads and what seems to be a collection of random answers.

I now instruct chatgpt to search the web for me and I read the result, since it works. I also read the news directly from various newspapers that I subscribe to to make sure they actually get money.

kwanbix•1d ago
I use ublock origin and it works just fine for me. AS much as I like to leave the google ecosystem, I tried bing and duckduckgo and they are not as good.
dieortin•13h ago
> I’m fine with regular old fashioned search engines

> I now instruct chatgpt to search the web for me and I read the result

I wouldn’t exactly classify ChatGPT as an old fashioned search engine

MyPasswordSucks•1d ago
In the old days - back before smartphones, back before widescreen monitors, back before broadband - the "Links" section was always a key part of any site. After spending time on a site, a visitor could find links to other pages - some of them on the same topic, some of them simply enjoyed by the creator of the site they were on. If one were to visualize the concept, they might well say that this formed a "web" of sorts.

The big publishers were the first to really reject the "Links" page. If it's not a link to our content, or the content of our sister publications, then why should we include it? Instead, they threw their resources into optimizing their placement on search engines. This took the "web" and turned it closer towards a hub-and-spoke system, as smaller sites withered and died.

Now, people have found a way to retrieve various pieces of information they're looking for that doesn't involve a search engine. It may not be perfect (gluey pizza, anyone?) but objectively, it's certainly more efficient than a list of places that have used the same words that a person is searching for, and honestly probably at least "nearly-as" reliable as said list, because the average Joe Sixpack always has, and always will, be a lot better at asking a question and getting an answer than he will be at finding an answer to his question within the confines of a larger story.

This devastates the large publishers' traffic.

I'd come up with a conclusion here, but I'm too distracted wondering where I placed my violin. It's really small, it could probably be anywhere...

Eisenstein•1d ago
I think the conclusion is that changing your business model in a reactive way to internet developments is a bad idea if you want to have a stable business. If you want to run your business that way, you better be on top of everything and you better be lucky. They rode the social media wave and lost, and now they are going to try to ride the AI wave because they don't have anything to fall back on. They are going to lose.

Legacy media grew fat off of TV and local news. Captive attention markets did not teach them how to entice people's attention, they took it for granted. They are not equipped to compete with youtube and tiktok and reddit and they will lose. Trending news from the AP wire is not unique or in depth enough for anyone to want to read more than the AI summary of your article.

What should they do? What they are good at, and what they were always good at: journalism. Write in-depth articles that take time to research and talent to write. Hire real journalists, pay them to find stories that take time to write, and publish those stories. People will pay for it.

arunabha•23h ago
> People will pay for it.

I would love it if it were true, but sadly, the data doesn't support this. A lot of local newspapers did real journalism relevant to their communities. However, the local newspapers were the hardest hit by the social media wave and few remain today. Fast forward to now, you cannot get any real local news easily.

The avg person never really valued real journalism to begin with and the hyper targeting/polarization of social media and closed echo chambers has made it worse.

rightbyte•23h ago
I don't think it is social media though. It started to go downhill for newspapers when they put their news on the internet for free subsidized by their papers.
JumpCrisscross•11h ago
> started to go downhill for newspapers when they put their news on the internet for free subsidized by their papers

To bolster this argument, the local papers that hard paywalled seem to have done just fine.

Eisenstein•23h ago
People get sick of it. Most people don't like living in a constant state of anger, ready to get into an argument all the time. We would rather have a shared notion of truth and a common bond. You can't predict the next 'thing' but you can usually count on it not being more of the same. Something new is going to take hold, and I would like it to involve substance and critique of narratives.
graemep•20h ago
> Most people don't like living in a constant state of anger, ready to get into an argument all the time

They may not like it, but that does not mean they are motivated to break away from it. I do not think they are aware why they feel like that - they are more likely to blame the other people than the platform.

There is also an addictive element to it.

rickydroll•20h ago
>People will pay for it.

I'm willing to pay, but not by individual subscriptions per news organization. I'm more interested in following journalists than news organizations.

senderista•16h ago
Sounds like the Substack model?
rickydroll•10h ago
Potentially, yes. However, the same problem I have with current subscription models also exists with Substack. I added up all the subscriptions necessary to bypass paywalls I encountered every month, and it came to roughly $3,000 a year. I'll have to do the same thing with Substack subscriptions. I expect they'll be like $50 a year for the basic subscription, so it would probably only be a few hundred to a thousand per year.
linguaz•1d ago
> ... the "Links" section was always a key part of any site. After spending time on a site, a visitor could find links to other pages - some of them on the same topic, some of them simply enjoyed by the creator of the site they were on.

Don't know how useful these are, but here are some links pages on a couple of websites I put together a while ago:

https://b79.net/fields/about

https://earthdirections.org/links/

Just personal non-commercial handcrafted sites. One day I'd like to figure out some tooling to manage / prune / update links, etc.

bluSCALE4•1d ago
They were called webrings.
DocTomoe•1d ago
Nah, Webrings were an extension of the link page ... but not the same thing.

The Link page was curated by the site operator and usually a linear list. IT's main goal was to say "Hey, this is cool, too".

A webring was more like a collective, whereas individual webring members did not necessarily know or agree with every other site in the ring. And it usually was not a list either, but more of a mini topical directory, often with a token-ring-style "Visit the next / random / prev site" navigation you could add to your own page. Webrings were already geared to increasing visitor numbers to your own page ("Others will link to me").

Oh, those were easier times.

grues-dinner•18h ago
What was the organisation of a webbing like? Did you have to email two people to arrange to insert yourself as a node at the same time to avoid breaking the ring? Or iframe'd in from a central point?
MyPasswordSucks•17h ago
Webrings were usually a centralized and automated entity. You'd add your site to the index (either through a webform or by emailing the maintainer), then link to http:// web-ring.tld /cgi-bin/ring?site=currentsitename&action=next or something similar, which would then redirect to the actual next site in the ring.

In their heyday, there'd also be "start your own webring" sites, so you didn't need cgi-bin access on your GeoShitties or AngelFucker or TriPoop or xoom [1] site in order to start up a webring.

[1] The dry and square history books will claim that the most exciting thing about xoom was its large storage allocation (10mb at launch! 25 soon after! You could upload an entire three minute mp3 at 128CBR "CD-Quality" bitrate and still have tons of space left over for two-frame .gifs!) or its simple members.xoom. com/username URL, but the true soldiers of those bygone battledays will know it was xoom's resiliency to childish renaming-mockery.

pabs3•6h ago
Active webrings still exist surprisingly:

https://wiki.archiveteam.org/index.php/Webring

benob•23h ago
The gemini web (smolweb) has no effective search engine, and therefore links also play a crutial role in content discovery...
rebuilder•23h ago
The ”not perfect” part really kind of ruins it for me. I can’t trust the LLM search’s answers and have to go find the source anyway, so what’s the point?

I’m seeing people in chats post stuff like “hey I didn’t know this word also means this!” when it really doesn’t, and invariably they have just asked an LLM and believed it.

david-gpu•21h ago
You can't blindly trust sources, either. Or, sometimes, you ability to understand the sources correctly.

I think of LLMs as bookworm friends who know a little bit about everything and are a little too overconfident about the depth of their understanding. They tend to repeat what they have heard uncritically, just like so many other people do.

If you don't expect them to be the ultimate arbitrer of truth, they can be pretty useful.

jtbayly•10h ago
Dictionary.com isn’t likely to just outright make up word meanings. There is such a thing as a trustworthy source, even if you can’t “blindly” trust it. You can still trust it and quote it and cite it. You can’t do any of those things so far with an LLM.
wraptile•22h ago
The publishers were just chasing traffic just like everyone else. Link pages were replaced by inline links which were preferred by both search engines and users. The goal was to provide relevant resources on relevant context rather in one big bucket dump no one's going to dig through anyway.
Lu2025•16h ago
Well, the "links" part was an early SEO, mutual back scratching.
WorldMaker•16h ago
Early Google PageRank was notorious for how much additional trust a given page had based on many links back to it existed. It was why certain bloggers had massive ranks early on, because they would be in big webs of conversations with lots of high quality links out and back in.

Early SEO did weaponize that and broke it for everyone.

uses•14h ago
You're gloating about the hardship which editors, journalists, writers, our informational institutions are facing because... sites stopped having a Links page in 1998? What the fuck, man.
jtbayly•10h ago
A recent article on HN was about small sites being destroyed in traffic, not large sites. And not just small, but small with essential human-written info.
gkanai•1d ago
I do a lot of product searches in Japanese and there is a ton of SEO spam on domains (.br but also many others) that are basically irrelevant to Japan. Google should be blocking all of that SEO spam but they can't seem to walk away from the ad revenue. There's no good domestic Japanese search engine so it's a defacto monopoly of bad search.
ipsum2•1d ago
Is Yahoo Japan not good?
725686•1d ago
"Searching" using AI is much faster and direct that traditional search. And with no ads.
DidYaWipe•1d ago
What chatbots? The article talks about Google's (shitty) "AI"-generated answer summaries, but that's not a chatbot, and as far as I can see the article doesn't say where all these "chatbots" are hosted. How are people finding them?

Very disappointing for WSJ.

jgalt212•1d ago
1. This is self-limiting. If they drive the content producing sites out of business, what is Google AI search going to summarize?

2. These chatbots must also be killing ad revenue on SERP pages. It's safe to assume these summaries are also reducing clicks on ad links just as they are reducing clicks on content links.

bitpush•1d ago
If Google doesn't do it, perplexity would. Or ChatGPT or Arc (browser)

It's one of those game theory situations. Best outcome is of everyone cooperates but if you think another party is going to defect (perplexity doing AI search) then the best move is to also defect (Google doing ai search)

sreekanth850•1d ago
A day will come when auth is an essential part of blogging sites.
deadbabe•1d ago
These days chatbots are good enough that when I do use a search engine, I really just want pure search results, I’m not interested in getting another AI opinion. I am sick and tired of getting AI overviews for a google search. What’s a better search engine? Heck, it doesn’t even have to be “better”, I’m looking for different results, not just perfect matches.
kevin_thibedeau•1d ago
Google destroyed Google's search. You can't surface any factual, non-slop content through them any more.
simonw•1d ago
This story has a few instances of suspicious numbers like these:

> When Dotdash merged with Meredith in 2021, Google search accounted for around 60% of the company’s traffic, Vogel said. Today, it is about one-third. Overall traffic is growing, thanks to efforts including newsletters and the MyRecipes recipe locker.

If traffic is up but percentage of that traffic from search is down, does that mean search traffic is down overall? Or does it mean that strategies to diversify their traffic sources are working as planned?

Aziell•1d ago
I use AI a lot myself and it definitely makes getting information faster but it feels like something’s missing, like the fun of digging for the truth yourself. These AI tools can just give you the answers, which saves time, but it also takes away a lot of depth and variety. Without realizing it, we might also be losing our ability to think independently.

Do you think AI can really replace all the value traditional news brings?

thrwaway55•1d ago
Isn't this already the case but you can replace traditional news with personal investigation? What is another layer of indirection?

I recall going to a townhall vote on some legislation a company I was employed with at the time wanted vs what the Teamster Union wanted and both sides doing body double line rigging to get their viewpoint in during "open comments" but I couldn't find a single news article about the obvious tactic by both sides.

Do you think traditional news can really replace all the value personally verifiable data brings?

jmyeet•1d ago
Previously, if you searched for "mortgage calculator" in Google, you'd get one at the top, embedded in the page. It was fast, simple and did what you wanted. I guess because of "competition" it was removed at some point. Now all the top results are terrible. The sites are slow. They ask too many questsions. They're clearly trying to generate leads and sell ads. Whereas Google's just... worked. There are good calculators out there but they don't rank as highly.

How exactly is this good for consumers?

My point is that a lot of publishers are what I call "low value". They're rent-seekers. They have easily obtained information, often user-generated, and their role is to gatekeep that and make you click just one more page to get a result because hey that's another slew of ads they can show you.

I'm sympathetic to the argument that LLMs steal. At the same time, we have to recognize that a lot of publishers are intentionally useless rent-seekers so it's hard for me to feel sorry for them.

wslh•1d ago
Google devastated search for small and medium sized companies, with AI or without it they have not improved the search engine to get accurate results with very concrete searches that are not prompts.
torqueehmada•1d ago
If nobody writes it, the LLM can't learn it. This is going to be a fascinating shift of resources. I suspect it will have the inverse effect of eroding traditional journalism outlets to retrofit for the new model, while boosting smaller competitors, but with everyone going to subscription based. The content creators could make a significant amount of money.

Then again, this would be a great time for state-sponsored media, if we didn't have such an anti-intellectual assclown as president and the lacky congress/scotus.

timewizard•1d ago
I'm naturally conspiratorial; but, this is possibly why search results were intentionally degraded over the past 5 years. Which has had an impact on overall site traffic that has not gone unnoticed. Google's been trying their luck with "creator summits" over the past few years but the creators are starting to smell a rat.

So you have Google which famously does not want people to actually leave their property. Infoboxes, calculator, extraction of semantic data for direct display in search results.

Would a company like that intentionally downgrade search results making quality content harder for users to find, then train their LLMs on this highly valuable content, ultimately creating an unnatural shift away from the previous model to the "weak AI chatbot" model?

I know HN hates conspiracies but there's trillions of dollars at stake here. We know companies will poison entire communities and create flammable rivers just to shave a few million off the expenses. Who knows what Google will do to keep it's market position?

_factor•18h ago
110% this.

Real web search is disappearing locked behind large datasets unavailable for normal users. The AI screen ensures you’re fed exactly what they intended while siloing off the web more and more to block competition. All the while signing exclusivity deals which should realistically be illegal (try finding current Reddit results anywhere but Google).

AI based interaction makes it much easier to manipulate users into buying your items as they add a layer of human-like trust on top of the machine. It won’t be long before prices are hidden behind LLMs generating prices based on who you are. I’m already noticing ChatGPT becoming more and more enthusiastic about any product it thinks I have the potential of buying. Try asking it if something is a good deal, 9 times out of 10 it will say, “Yes, go for it.”

We don’t want to live in a proprietary world where LLMs exist. This technology needs to be open. The search data needs to be open and not walled off to only monopolies. This is an inflection point.

bananalychee•1d ago
I don't believe that Google's AI Overviews or even LLMs in general are to blame for the decline in traffic to news websites. ChatGPT launched with the GPT-3.5 model in November 2022 without a web search function, and had a training data cutoff date of September 2021. Google AI Overviews launched in May 2024 to generally poor reception initially, and ChatGPT Search launched in July 2024. The graph presented in the article reveals a trend starting as far back as April 2022, well before mass-market LLM products could extract useful information in real time, and it doesn't look like it's accelerated significantly. In fact, the WSJ series contradicts it. Prior data would likely reveal that the broad decline began much earlier, since it's well-known[1] that younger generations prefer to get their news from social media these days. Paywalls, quality degradation in search results, and mistrust in the objectivity of news coverage are likely contributing factors.

I don't doubt that the shift from web searches to automated information extraction will pose new challenges to websites that rely on search engine optimization to drive new user traffic, especially for small/individual operators, and I'll be happy to witness the death of SEO if it comes to that, but blaming a new Google Search feature[2] for a long-running decline in traffic to online newspapers strikes me as a deflection from the slow death of their business model.

P.S.: Google's AI Overviews are fairly respectful of content providers and link back to source material from the generated text.

[1] https://theconversation.com/young-people-are-abandoning-news...

[2] The current title of the article is "News Sites Are Getting Crushed by Google’s New AI Tools"

felipeerias•1d ago
The emergence of AI tools and closed platforms will reduce the importance of advertising on the open Web, and eventually of the open Web itself.

One possible way this plays out is that attention and investment move towards proprietary ecosystems, with large AI companies being able to secure exclusive access to closed information sources while everyone else is reduced to getting what they can from a dwindling open Web.

Another possibility might be that new standards allow interoperability between AI agents and open content providers, including microtransactions between them, and creating a new marketplace for information.

https://stratechery.com/2025/the-agentic-web-and-original-si...

potamic•1d ago
What will happen is that chatbots will start showing ads and publishers will bid over prompt keywords to have their content sponsored and boosted. I don't see the end result being very different from what it is today. Chatbots will eventually get enshittified to the level of google search today. It's inevitable, unless there's some dramatic shift in advertising economics.
isaacremuant•23h ago
Ads will come inside the LLM response and all around it. I'm quite positive. You don't know how much these businesses thrive in being the "drivers of customers to other businesses by showing their ads".

It's going to be there.

p1dda•1d ago
Great news to see the abominable corporate news media wither and hopefully die.
Mehuleo•1d ago
This is definitely bad. But on a different note, I think this was inevitable, as the new generation's attention span keeps dropping rapidly with all the TikTok and Instagram shorts. I believe publishers will need to figure out shorter written content formats as well. Until then, Google and others that offer alternatives will have an edge. I'm not saying this is the only way forward—just part of the evolution. I believe publishers will evolve to adapt to this too.
niemandhier•1d ago
All I want is to go to the site of my favorite newspapers and see stuff that matters.

Instead I get things like this:

“Modern fathers have failed”

“Man need to ditch the dadbod”

“Equality means only man should be drafted”

They have tons of great and deeply investigated content, but they throw engagement bait into your face. In the end I use a search engine to extract a relevant subset of articles.

patatero•1d ago
This is Google's fault.

They made Search worse so people have to resort to AI chatbots.

ryao•23h ago
This seems appropriate:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZXwdRBxZ0U

It took a little longer than predicted, but “Googlezon” is finally happening, with or without Google and Amazon.

darqis•23h ago
Would you say that Google's search taking results from other sites and compiling them and presenting them as their own is piracy?
oliwarner•22h ago
Google's demise is self-inflicted.

They broke search by prioritising ads, then trusting the wrong, big publishers (eg every listacle from a big media network), broke their advanced search controls (domain blacklists, quotes that mean quotes, plus-and-minuses to alter things).

Then they added their own LLM's analysis to searches, admitting that that their SERPs are dead. They were in this death-spiral well before LLMs became an alternative. I won't pretend that SEO wasn't making traditional search untenable, but the vector Google chose will make their key product obsolete.

The thing I worry about is what they'll do to retain revenue. They have knowledge systems that cater to a lot more than what we normally search on. They have address data, know where people physically are right now, have live communication data on billions of users, know their shopping habits, and a thousand etceteras. Meta too. They have communication data on billions of people. How are these older software companies going to monetise the data they've amassed in an age when they are getting close to being able to replicate personas, model actual human behaviours?

busterarm•16h ago
They've shown in their other products that they really don't even care anymore.

Roughly 30% of the YouTube ads I get served recently are 10minutes long or more. At least once a day I feel like I'm reporting some 50+ minute long alternative medicine scam ad.

incomingpain•20h ago
Practically every news site now needs archive.ph because of paywall.

There's also a problem around trust in journalists being tremendously low.

scotty79•18h ago
Last decade or two was gradual exploration of how terrible and ad-infested you can get without people going away to somewhere else entirely. Now that a new elsewhere popped up everybody suddenly found out that instead of being knee deep in sewage, it already reached their mouth and nose.
phantom_wizard•18h ago
They did it to themselves. I'm sure we will read books about their failure and the replacement of Google search with chats and llms. The outcome is quite peculiar, because those chats are a blessing but should we really give them our data away. Scary what they will do with it. It was already scary enough with Google.
AaronAPU•14h ago
The other day I used Google to research something I didn’t know the answer to. It gave back a slightly reformatted piece of text which had been directly stolen from my own blog post.

So not only did it steal my traffic, it elevated my random opinion to pseudo “official” truth.

TiredOfLife•12h ago
Same publishers that demanded Google to pay them for the privilege to link to them?
Fairburn•9h ago
Google, Bing etal.. are fast becoming irrelevant. At least as a search engine