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This Article is From Oct 26, 2019

Google Says New AI-Powered Search Update Is ‘Huge Step Forward’

(Bloomberg) -- Google is injecting its search engine with new technology to better interpret the billions of web queries it handles every day, a change top executives described as one of the most significant in the company's history.

This shift, announced Friday, moves the world's biggest search engine from spitting out results based on keywords to “something closer to language,” said Ben Gomes, the search chief for Alphabet Inc.'s Google. “We're very far from solving the problem fully, but this is a huge step forward,” he said at a press briefing.

Google has no peers in web search. But improvements to its core search technology are critical for keeping an edge in adjacent areas, primarily voice-computing, where Google competes with Amazon.com Inc. The new system relies on a Google artificial intelligence tool designed to parse long, complicated sentences, rather than just strings of words. In tests, Google executives said it produced far more precise results.

Any tweaks to Google search have ripple effects across industries that depend on it for web traffic. Over the years, Google has moved further away from its old 10 blue links results page. It now shows more results from its own services for some queries, such as flight information, or pulls out blocks of texts from websites into what it calls “featured snippets.” Rivals have complained furiously to regulators that Google's actions are anticompetitive.

The Google executives said the new system had produced more featured snippets in results outside the U.S. They insist that Google isn't pulling eyeballs away from others, but that improvements to search results drive more searches and overall web traffic.

“If people are able to get more queries answered, they ask more queries,” Gomes said. “And that results in more traffic to the overall ecosystem.” He didn't share data on those trends.

The new system will be applied to search results in English first and then expand. Google said it will not immediately affect search advertisements.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Bergen in San Francisco at mbergen10@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jillian Ward at jward56@bloomberg.net, Andrew Pollack, Anne VanderMey

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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