Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Google just broke search

Add as a preferred source on Google
AI Overviews being shown in Google Search.
Google

Google AI Overviews were announced a couple of weeks ago at Google I/O, and they’ve already proven to be rather controversial. The aim to provide high-quality answers to your questions summarized from the web, but a series of recent X (formerly Twitter) threads show how big of a fail it’s already proven to be.

The response that went viral involves a very dubious pizza recipe. As reported, when prompting Google for an answer to the issue of “cheese not sticking to pizza,” the AI Overview suggests adding nontoxic glue to your pizza to prevent the cheese from sliding off. The exact words the AI overview gave are as follows: “You can also add about 1/8 cup of non-toxic glue to the sauce to give it more tackiness.” Where did the Google AI overview get the info as a source? An 11-year-old Reddit comment from this thread, in what was clearly a joke.

Recommended Videos

https://t.co/W09ssjvOkJ pic.twitter.com/6ALCbz6EjK

— SG-r01 (@heavenrend) May 22, 2024

The words “cheese not sticking to pizza” generated this unexpected and funny response, and the internet is having a field day with it. The Google AI Overview response has since gone viral, with someone even trying glue pizza just to make the point.

It should be noted that we’ve seen a massive uptick in Reddit and forum posts showing up higher in Google searches. It’s also worth noting that Reddit recently signed a $60 million deal to let Google train its models on Reddit content. It’s not hard to connect the dots on how this might have happened.

It’s not just Reddit though. Another AI Overview was posted online with an answer to “how many rocks should I eat each day,” which pulls information directly from The Onion.

her pic.twitter.com/FGbvO923gk

— follow @bencollins on bluesky (@oneunderscore__) May 23, 2024

Part of the problem is the absolute conviction in which AI Overviews delivers its answers. It doesn’t bring up a link to an Onion article and let you do the adjudication. Instead, it treats every source like it’s Wikipedia and delivers information in complete confidence.

Google claims that its AI Overviews give users high-quality information and that such errors are uncommon. Here is the official response provided to Digital Trends by Google: “The vast majority of AI Overviews provide high quality information, with links to dig deeper on the web. Many of the examples we’ve seen have been uncommon queries, and we’ve also seen examples that were doctored or that we couldn’t reproduce. We conducted extensive testing before launching this new experience, and as with other features we’ve launched in Search, we appreciate the feedback. We’re taking swift action where appropriate under our content policies, and using these examples to develop broader improvements to our systems, some of which have already started to roll out.”

It seems as if some of these AI Overviews will be hard to correct if they can’t be reproduced. The “broader improvements” will need to be the solution, and since Google says they’re already in the works, hopefully we’ll begin to see some better searches soon. We’ll have to see if Google responds to the situation further beyond that statement. After receiving negative feedback around its image generation in Gemini earlier this year, Google had to apologize and pull it down to fix its issues.

For now, though, these are both good reminders of how careful we need to be when trusting AI engines for information. Google AI Overview started rolling out to everyone in the U.S. earlier this month, and with more countries coming soon. But with answers like this, there may be more people reaching for a way to turn it off than Google expected.

Judy Sanhz
Computing Writer
Judy Sanhz is a Digital Trends computing writer covering all computing news. Loves all operating systems and devices.
Claude’s Sonnet 5 is built to do more on its own and cost you less
Better than its predecessor, nearly as good as the flagship, and meaningfully cheaper than both.
Art, Floral Design, Graphics

Every major AI lab is racing to prove its models can work autonomously with minimal hand-holding; we’re now seeing pricing emerge as the next battleground. 

Anthropic just fired its latest shot, Claude Sonnet 5, a model the company says performs nearly as well as its flagship Opus 4.8 at a fraction of the cost.

Read more
Apple Creator Studio adds AI tools across Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro and Pixelmator Pro
Final Cut Pro gets AI captions, Auto Mask and better Pixelmator Pro workflows in Creator Studio update
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Apple has introduced a major update to Apple Creator Studio, adding new AI features, deeper Pixelmator Pro integration, and workflow upgrades across Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, Keynote, Pages, Numbers, Motion, Compressor, Freeform, and Final Cut Camera.

The update makes Creator Studio more useful across Mac, iPad, and iPhone, especially for people who move between video editing, image editing, presentations, documents, spreadsheets, and music production.

Read more
AI browsers like Perplexity Comet can be tricked into spilling your password through BioShocking exploit
Six AI browsers were found leaking saved passwords and many of them haven't fixed it yet.
MacBook Air in hand, Comet browser loaded—let’s see what Perplexity’s AI can really do

Security researchers just found a strange way to trick AI browsers into handing over your passwords. They managed to trick AI browser agents into exposing sensitive data like saved passwords, session cookies, and private tokens by disguising the theft as part of a harmless "game."

The technique is called BioShocking, named after the popular video game BioShock, where a brainwashed character is manipulated into believing a false reality. Once an AI browser falls for the same trick, it stops following its own safety rules entirely.

Read more