Open artificial intelligence Large-scale search engine powered by GPT-4o It’s finally here and you can sign up for it Waiting list now. company explain It plans to integrate “the best of [search] Function” directly enters ChatGPT at a certain vague point. As it stands, the new search engine appears set to replace Google’s absolute dominance in the field and contrast with the Mountain View tech giant’s moves. Artificial intelligence enters Google search.
As OpenAI details, SearchGPT is more than just an ordinary search engine. In many ways, it’s effective, like Google’s AI overview or current Bing search responses, but a little different. The user enters a prompt into an interface like ChatGPT, and the AI generates a response with multiple embedded links to where it fetched the information from around the web. Depending on the question, such as asking for a list of music festivals in a certain location, the AI might reply with a blurb with direct links to each site. There is a separate tab on the left sidebar where you can view and click on each link provided by the page.
For other queries that require more nuance, SearchGPT will provide you with a direct response in parentheses at the end of each paragraph, with the name and source link. user Follow-up questions can be asked and the AI should respond based on the context of the previous prompt. ChatGPT already has many of these features and is fully connected to the internet. The difference now is that the new user interface emphasizes links to websites where artificial intelligence gets all this information.
The new integration is closer to what you get now in Google Search. In the current version of the AI overview, users will receive several paragraphs of AI-generated text according to prompts, as well as some drop-down menus used to link to the locations where Gemini obtains information. you can still Remove these AI overviews from Google Search If you want to go back to a purer experience. For SearchGPT, artificial intelligence is the essence of how it operates.
Companies like Google and OpenAI are relatively liberal about the content used to train these artificial intelligence models, much to the chagrin of publishers and writers. Recently, PerplexityAI has been criticized by websites such as Forbes as Create AI-generated articles Based on original reporting without permission. The New York Times is Currently suing OpenAI Provide training on its content. At the same time, the main News networks such as the Financial TimesAxel Springer and Associated Press Signed a multi-million dollar deal with OpenAI to let the company train on its awesome content.
The problem is that so many websites rely on clicks and ad revenue to survive, and that’s not going to happen if a user reads an introduction to artificial intelligence but doesn’t actually click on the link. OpenAI claims in its announcement that it is using artificial intelligence to “enhance” the search experience “by highlighting high-quality content in a conversational interface and providing users with multiple opportunities to engage.” This is the company’s promise to provide those “prominent” links in user searches.
The message of OpenAI is that it benefits websites by presenting them differently than Google does. Thursday, Google renew its chatbot Gemini 1.5 FlashAdd more links at the end of longer, more detailed responses — four times the longest contextual window, according to the company. Gizmodo tries, but it’s still not as comprehensive as Gemini Advanced in providing answers to some fairly basic questions. Its links to external resources are few, very standard, and appear as gray boxes outside the text.
SearchGPT is still a beta product and things may change. We’ll have to wait and see if it gives original journalists and writers more credit with all the promised connections. Although if SearchGPT provides a small introductory (hopefully correct) answer up front, why would most people bother clicking on that link, even if there are tons of them?