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Google uses a new AI feature.

 

Google uses a new AI feature.



To provide you with lengthy article summaries, Google uses artificial intelligence.


The introduction of a new element in Google's service (the generative search experiment) that enables users to sum up the articles they read on the network was revealed today, Tuesday. To save users time and reduce scrolling, the AI-based SGE (AI) SGE can summarize search results on their behalf.


In a blog post, Google said that the Search Labs program's "early experiment" with the functionality began going out on Tuesday.


 Users who have the SGE service subscription have automatic access to the feature, and unsubscribed users can do so separately (Research Labs).


The function will initially be made available via the Google app for Android and iOS, according to the business, and it will be added to Chrome on desktop devices "in the coming days."


When a user clicks on an icon at the bottom of the screen, the function in the Google smartphone app will extract a collection of "key points" created by artificial intelligence from an article.


 This, along with the fact that the feature "only works on articles that are freely available to the public on the web," and Google's statement that it would not function on websites that are protected by publishers with a system (limiting access to non-subscribers), are the reasons it is not compatible with those websites.


Google claimed that SGE is also getting a few more upgrades. The business claims that you will be able to hover your mouse over certain words in SGE results for search queries pertaining to subjects like physics, economics, and history to get definitions or instructive graphs.


Google is also improving the readability of SGE summaries of programming information.


 Google introduced the SGE service at the yearly Google I/O developer conference in May of last year and has been working to enhance it ever since.


Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, stated that user feedback had "so far been very positive" and that "over time this will become the way search works" in the company's most recent earnings call with investors.

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