by Amy Skorheim from Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics on (#6XZB2)
Google's AI Overviews do not save me time. For one, I work for a tech blog and am therefore professionally curious as to whether or not the generated answers are correct, so I spend a few ticks figuring that out. (Answer: Sometimes, but not always!)Then things get existential as I contemplate how long a self-cannibalizing system can sustain itself - if the AI gives answers pulled from websites that survive on visits from readers, what happens when no one visits those sites because AI cribbed the answer? Will I still get to write for websites if websites die from traffic starvation? It's a lot to think about when all I want is TSA's latest lithium-ion battery regulations.Curiously (and unhelpfully) the first result when you Google How to turn off AI Overviews in Chrome" doesn't actually answer the question. The entry, from Google Support, discusses turning the feature off back when AI Overviews were experimental and handled through Google Labs. Navigate a little further down that page and you'll see: