Google faces backlash for switching to ‘AI search’

Published May 23, 2026 Updated May 23, 2026 06:07am

KARACHI: Google has announced that its iconic search bar will be “totally reimagined with AI,” marking what the company described as the biggest change to the web’s favourite search engine in 25 years.

For years, when internet users have wanted to know something online, they Google it. But the world was forced to confront a new reality when the company announced users will not be able to just search for things like they used to, prompting immediate backlash over misinformation and environmental concerns.

Following the announcement, comment sections were full of people telling Google this was a terrible idea nobody had asked for. Some users threatened to walk out on the world’s most popular search engine if the change is implemented, noting they had alternatives prepared for this exact scenario.

Users reacting to the company’s announcement on X asked the company to please do away with the idea of putting artificial intelligence in everything and “let the internet heal.”

Frustrated users threaten mass exodus to alternative search engines

One user, expressing fatigue over fighting the AI surge, asked Google to at least allow people to opt out of the new development.

While Google’s move seems like common sense on the surface, especially in the context of the rise of AI chatbots as tools for retrieving information, experts note that it is not the full picture.

AI agents — including Google’s own Gemini system, which the AI-search feature will operate on — are known to be susceptible to manipulation.

The bots often push popular but unverified information as fact, leading to a dangerous potential to spread misinformation. While some services, including Google’s current system of AI summaries, attempt to counter this by citing sources, many people do not check these citations before accepting the information as factual.

Additionally, there are environmental impacts tied to artificial intelligence, with the technology heavily criticised for its clean water usage.

Estimates indicate 10 to 50 prompts on an AI agent use up roughly half a litre of water. Multiplied by three, it’s the water an average person needs to consume in a day; multiplied by millions, experts warn, it is an environmental crisis waiting to happen.

With water scarcity and misinformation both being prevalent issues, critics say it is worth asking if AI really is the next frontier of technology or if society has taken a wrong turn somewhere.

Published in Dawn, May 23rd, 2026

Opinion

Editorial

More stabilisation
Updated 23 May, 2026

More stabilisation

The stabilisation achieved through painful growth compression steps could have been used as a platform for structural reforms.
Appalling tactics
23 May, 2026

Appalling tactics

IN Punjab, an encounter with the law can quickly turn deadly. Encouraged by a culture of ‘shoot first, ask...
Failed experiment
23 May, 2026

Failed experiment

IT is going from bad to worse for Shan Masood and Pakistan. It is now seven successive Test defeats away from home;...
Hardening lines
Updated 22 May, 2026

Hardening lines

Iranian suspicions about Pakistan’s close ties with Washington and Gulf states persist, while Pakistan remains uneasy over Tehran’s growing engagement with India.
Unliveable city
22 May, 2026

Unliveable city

IN Karachi, when it comes to water, it is every man and woman for themselves. A persistent shortage in available...
Glof alert
22 May, 2026

Glof alert

FOR many communities in northern Pakistan, the sound of heavy rain now carries a different meaning. It is no longer...