Whoever at Google thought this was a good idea should no longer be involved in search! Reddit is a terrible source of information, it's all confirmation bias and unqualified people giving advice upvoted by unqualified people to vet it. It's worse than Yahoo Answers because it looks more trustworthy on the surface but has worse quality of information.
That describes the whole internet. It was never meant to be anything more, so that's what we got.
Which was fine, until we had the bright idea of feeding it all into a neural network as a collection of facts.
Then we gave that neural network a voice and a personality. It spoke with the utmost confidence as the expert on any subject.
Truth, lies, facts and falsehoods all blended together and regurgited in an infinite stream of babble.
I vacillate between LLMs being an interesting fad with limited usefulness and an apocalypse that'll throw the world into chaos. I'm back on the fence again I suppose, leaning towards the latter.
OpenAI is excited about their deal with Reddit too, it's a game of one-upmanship in the current AI hype cycle. It also makes Reddit seem very valuable for the AI arms race, could influence its stock price, and there are certain stock holders who are benefiting greatly if this does increase the price.
> "google execs hearing the feedback that 'adding reddit to the end of every search is the only way to get information that you need' and immediately destroying their business trying to automate that"
> All these examples seem like deliberate attempts to get weird/nonsense answers back.
I'm not sure that I agree.
If a child hears a rumour, or sees some joke online, that claims that gasoline cooks spaghetti faster they may search to find out if it's legit.
During Obama's term, there was a right wing conspiracy theory that gained popularity that claimed that Obama was Muslim. Someone coming across that conspiracy theory years after the fact, completely devoid of any context (ex: a pre-teen who wasn't even alive yet during Obama's term), might do a search to find out if it's true.
There WAS an NPR article that cited a study claiming that parachutes are no more effective than regular backpacks. AI results have not been enabled for my Google account yet, and currently if you search for "are parachutes effective?" you get a feature snippet that clips that article and links to it. Now take that link, with all of its context, out of the picture and imagine that someone hears that claim casually and wants to search to see if it's true. Currently, in MY search results, you get the link to the NPR article that not only explains where the claim comes from but gives you the full context with all of the "gotchas." It sounds like with Google AI the first thing you get is a definitive, authoritative claim that no, parachutes are not effective at saving your lives and you might as well jump out of an air plane with your carry-on pack-back on.