Your online clicks hold significant power. Just moments of attention can elevate or sink a website. However, recent changes in user behavior may reshape the internet as we know it.
Over the past year, Google has introduced a new feature that many users have noticed: AI-generated responses, known as “AI Overviews,” now often appear at the top of search results instead of the traditional list of links. While these summaries can be helpful, they sometimes lead to misleading advice. More importantly, they appear to influence user behavior.
A recent study by the Pew Research Center, involving 900 American internet users, revealed that those exposed to AI Overviews were less likely to click on links and more prone to end their browsing sessions altogether. According to the analysis, users were nearly twice as likely to skip links after seeing an AI Overview, with 26% closing their browsers entirely.
This shift is significant, considering Google processes five trillion searches annually, serving as the starting point for most online activity. Many websites rely heavily on traffic from Google for their revenue, especially those that provide information instead of selling products. Changes in Google’s algorithms can dramatically impact traffic, leading to severe revenue declines for websites that depend on it.
Lily Ray, VP of SEO strategy at Amsive, noted that many sites are experiencing revenue drops of 20% to 40% due to decreased traffic from AI Overviews. This trend threatens the ecosystem of high-quality content creation.
Recently, Google introduced AI Mode, which removes traditional search results entirely, raising concerns among experts about the potential destruction of the web as we know it. However, Google disputes these claims, stating that it continues to direct billions of clicks to websites and that the Pew study’s methodology is flawed.
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Pew stands by its findings, suggesting that many independent studies corroborate its data. Reports indicate that AI Overviews can reduce search traffic by 30% to 70%, depending on the query.
Google argues that traffic fluctuations occur for various reasons and claims that AI Overviews provide higher-quality clicks, allowing users to discover a broader range of sources. Ironically, Google’s own AI model, Gemini, suggests that AI Overviews negatively affect websites, contradicting the company’s public stance.
The core question remains: Is this what users want? Google believes that people prefer AI-driven experiences that foster deeper inquiries and connections to websites. Critics like Ray argue that this perspective overlooks the hard work of content creators, as AI tools benefit from the very content they diminish.
AI Overviews often produce inaccuracies, which not only divert traffic from websites but also limit users’ ability to critically engage with information. While Google asserts that its AI responses are reliable, the potential trade-off involves less user choice and greater convenience.
If Google is mistaken, and websites begin to disappear, it won’t be due to incorrect clicks but rather a collective decision to stop clicking altogether.
SOURCE: BBC

























