The day after the Google I/O developer conference, Nilay Patel, editor-in-chief of technology media The Verge, had a conversation with Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet In-depth conversation with a lot of information.
Sundar talked about Google’s new search generation experience, thoughts on the duality of generative AI functions, why Google is not the initiator of a new round of AI platform changes, and how Google views the impact of generative AI on unemployment and forged songs, etc. Recently, Google announced that it would transfer DeepMind, a British AI company owned by Google parent company Alphabet, to Google and merge it with the Google Brain AI team to form Google DeepMind. Sundar also responded to the reasons why he made this decision and how it was implemented.
Google invented many of the core technologies behind the current AI craze. In the name of the popular AI chatbot ChatGPT, the “T” stands for Transformer, which is the large-scale language model technology invented by Google. But amid the generative AI craze, Google is lagging behind. OpenAI and many other companies have pioneered generative AI products. Microsoft’s New Bing is seen as the first real competitor to Google search in a long time.
Therefore, how Sundar views the future of search and how he plans to use AI to reshape search is not only crucial to the development of Google, but also has great reference value for the search industry. During the exchange, Sundar responded to Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella’s previous remarks about “Microsoft making Google dance” and talked about his vision for Google and the ambition that drives him to lead Google into the future.
For the full text of the conversation, please visit The Verge