Key Points:
- Erroneous Outputs: Google’s AI Overviews in Search have been producing blatantly incorrect information.
- Google’s Stance: Google claims these are rare instances and not reflective of typical user experiences.
- Need for Improvement: Google acknowledges these errors are being used to refine the system, aiming for future accuracy.
Google’s recent public launch of AI Overviews in its Search feature has quickly garnered attention for all the wrong reasons. Designed to generate concise summaries from various sources to provide users with quick, digestible answers, the AI’s performance has been riddled with inaccuracies. Despite Google’s assertion that these are mere “isolated examples,” the scope of the problem suggests otherwise.
Almost immediately after the feature’s release, social media was flooded with examples of the AI producing laughably erroneous results. Some of these include advising users to put glue on their pizza, claiming chicken is safe to eat at 102 degrees Fahrenheit, asserting the existence of “blinker fluid,” and suggesting one can extinguish an oil fire by adding more oil. Moreover, it falsely stated that no African country starts with the letter “K,” all while appropriating content from other websites without proper attribution.
Google, however, maintains that these instances are not the norm. In a statement to The Verge, the company described the errors as stemming from “generally very uncommon queries,” emphasizing that such mistakes are not representative of the majority of user interactions. Google also stated that it is actively using these errors to improve the AI’s performance.
Despite this reassurance, the decision to make AI Overviews the default experience in Search—without an option to disable it—raises concerns. The prevalence of these glaring mistakes highlights the inherent risks of deploying generative AI at such a scale, particularly when the AI draws from unreliable sources or hallucinates information. While Google aims to refine its system, the initial rollout has left many questioning the wisdom of its implementation strategy.
In the meantime, users can expect advertisements to intermingle with these AI-generated insights, which may offer some respite from the barrage of misinformation.
wtf? google is so cooked pic.twitter.com/J9FVu7BM4l
— KAIA (@kaiakairos) May 23, 2024
Google AI overview suggests adding glue to get cheese to stick to pizza, and it turns out the source is an 11 year old Reddit comment from user F*cksmith 😂 pic.twitter.com/uDPAbsAKeO
— Peter Yang (@petergyang) May 23, 2024
um.
(I can’t try this in Canada – does it replicate?) pic.twitter.com/17vYq1TuJo
— Gary Marcus (@GaryMarcus) May 23, 2024