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submitted 3 days ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
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[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

Btw, for the people who don't know, you can turn off the AI previews https://udm14.com/ (don't use this site to search, click on what is umd14 and edit your search urls to include that).

[-] [email protected] 21 points 3 days ago

Most searchers don’t click on anything else if there’s an AI overview — only 8% click on any other search result. It’s 15% if there isn’t an AI summary.

I can't get over that. An oligopolistic company imposes a source on its users that is very likely either hallucinating or plagiarizing or both, and most people seem to eat it up (out of convenience or naiveté, I assume).

[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago

An alternative explanation for a lot of this is that people are seqrching for something that interests them, seeing that every result is spam or shopping and exiting the page.

[-] [email protected] 17 points 3 days ago

Counter-theory: The now completely irrelevant search results and the idiotic summaries, are a one-two punch combo, that plunges the user in despair, and makes them close the browser out of disgust.

[-] [email protected] 10 points 3 days ago

Convenience is king, and never mind accuracy.

[-] [email protected] 10 points 3 days ago

If I'm not mistaken, even in pre-LLM days, Google had some kind of automated summaries which were sometimes wrong. Those bothered me less. The AI hallucinations appear to be on a whole new level of wrong (or is this just my personal belief - are there any statistics about this?).

[-] [email protected] 9 points 3 days ago

Subjectively speaking:

  1. Pre-LLM summaries were for the most part actually short.
  2. They were more directly lifted from human written sources, I vaguely remember lawsuits or the threat of lawsuits by newspapers over google infoboxes and copyright infringement in pre-2019 days, but i couldn't find anything very conclusive with a quick search.
  3. They didn't have the sycophantic—hey look at me I'm a genius—overly-(and wrong)-detailed tone that the current batch has.
[-] [email protected] 10 points 3 days ago

I usually scroll down just a little and find the source they ~~trained on~~ stole from. That one deserves a click most times because it explains the source.

this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2025
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