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       Google's Sundar Pichai Lays Out His AI Roadmap
        
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       (Bloomberg) -- Alphabet Inc. Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai
       says artificial intelligence has been a key focus of the Google parent
       since 2016, back when ChatGPT-maker OpenAI was in its infancy. After
       all, Google researchers invented the "T" in GPT (as in generative pre-
       trained transformer). It was a critical innovation that made
       conversational search using large language models possible.
        
       Somehow though, Google missed the big chatbot moment and has been
       playing catchup ever since. But Pichai, who sat down for an exclusive
       interview with The Circuit with Emily Chang, doesn't seem worried. "We
       weren't the first company to do search. We weren't the first company
       to do email. We weren't the first company to build a browser," he
       says. "So I view this AI as we are in the earliest possible stages."
        
       In other words, Pichai is playing the long game, and says Google—which
       dominates key real estate on the web—has plenty of time to win.
        
       Google's effort to reclaim the AI microphone has nevertheless
       experienced more than a few hiccups. When the company unveiled its
       Gemini image generator in February, users quickly found weaknesses.
       Requests for depictions of historical scenes yielded awkward images of
       Asian Nazis and Black US founding fathers. The company's effort to
       ensure its AI systems didn't perpetuate human biases had apparently
       backfired.
        
       "We got it wrong," says Pichai, 51, who contends the incident was a
       case of good intentions gone awry. Google immediately shut down
       Gemini's image generation feature for people, with Pichai ordering a
       complete rebuild. "From the ground up we are retraining these models,
       just to make sure we are also making the product better," he says. "As
       soon as it's ready, we will get it out to people." He predicted the
       feature will be re-released in a few weeks.
        
       Still, the future of search—and whether Google will continue to
       dominate that space—remains unclear. Next week, Pichai is to share his
       vision for the company's future at Google I/O, the company's annual
       developers conference. But in his interview with The Circuit, he gave
       us a preview.
        
       Are we nearing the end of those "ten blue links," like some pundits
       have predicted, as more conversational results from ChatGPT,
       Antrhopic's Claude and other chatbots become more mainstream? Pichai
       says the best form of search will involve some combination of
       narrative answers and links to other websites to allow further
       exploration.
        
       "My son is celiac, so we did a quick question to see whether something
       is gluten free," Pichai says. Often a search for one query "leads to
       more things and then you want to explore more." Meeting a variety of a
       searcher's needs is what makes Google unique, he says.
        
       Getting search right is essential to Google's future, since ads placed
       among search results drive Alphabet's $300 billion in annual revenue.
       "We've always found people want choices, including in commercial
       areas, and that's a fundamental need," Pichai explains. "We've been
       experimenting with ads and the data we see show that those fundamental
       principles will hold true."
        
       It's also at the heart of a landmark antitrust lawsuit in which the US
       Department of Justice accuses Google of abusing its market power to
       illegally maintain a monopoly over online search and related
       advertising. A federal judge is expected to rule on the case later
       this year, and his decision could have far-reaching consequences for
       Alphabet's business and beyond.
        
       But if Pichai is worried about Alphabet being broken up, he doesn't
       show it. "People are trying to solve problems in their day-to-day
       lives," he says. "A lot of our products integrate in a way that
       provides value for our users." The way Google is approaching AI
       "drives innovation, adds choice in the market," he says. "That's how I
       think about it."
        
       In the meantime, there are plenty of hurdles Google will need to clear
       to arrive at its AI future. An increasing amount of AI-generated
       content is showing up on the internet, and all search engines will
       have to figure out how to track, categorize and surface it for
       users—or not. For example, last year Google's algorithms inadvertently
       made an AI-generated "selfie" its top image for searches of "tank
       man," the Chinese man who famously stood before tanks leaving
       Tiananmen Square in 1989. Google took that image down from its
       Knowledge Graph and Knowledge Panels, but not before it momentarily
       gave people a new twist on history.
        
       "The challenge for everyone and the opportunity is: How do you have a
       notion of what's objective and real in a world where there's going to
       be a lot of synthetic content?" Pichai asks. "I think it's part of
       what will define search in the next decade ahead."
        
       Generative AI is developing so quickly that soon the large language
       models sponging up information on the internet will run out of content
       to feed on. That will lead to a situation where models are turning to
       AI-generated data to train on.
        
       Pichai says however that there are ways in which models being trained
       on synthetic data could lead to useful research breakthroughs. For
       instance, Google built up AlphaGo, its AI system that's been trained
       to master the Japanese board game Go, in part by letting computer
       programs play with each other. "In the field, you call this self
       play," Pichai says. "Over time, there's this notion of can you have
       models create outputs for other models to learn? These are all
       research areas now."
        
       Amid all the strategic challenges Alphabet faces, Pichai is also
       confronting some skepticism from within the Google ranks. Current and
       former employees have criticized his leadership style as too cautious
       and consensus-driven, citing that as a reason Google ceded the lead in
       AI to ChatGPT, at least initially.
        
       "The reality I think is quite different," Pichai argues. "I think the
       larger the company is, you are making fewer consequential decisions,
       but they need to be clear and you have to point the whole company to
       that." He says it's important to build consensus because "that's what
       allows you to have maximum impact behind those decisions."
        
       Pichai has recently taken several steps to streamline the business to
       focus more on AI—including layoffs. Alphabet has gone through multiple
       rounds of cuts in divisions including hardware, engineering and the
       Google Assistant team.
        
       Last month, Google also fired dozens of engineers who protested the
       company's cloud contract with the Israeli government, in what Pichai
       describes as an unacceptable disruption of daily business. "It has
       nothing to do with the matter or the topic they're discussing. It's
       about the conduct of how they went about it," he says. "I view,
       particularly in this moment with AI, the opportunity we have ahead of
       us is immense, but it needs a real focus on our mission."
        
       Microsoft Corp., with its big investments in AI startups like OpenAI,
       Inflection and Mistral AI, has emerged as Alphabet's biggest rival in
       the most frenzied tech cycle since the dotcom boom. The two are vying
       to win the AI race, realizing the technology holds the key to the
       future of search—which is essential to the future of AI.
        
       Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has had some fighting words for Google,
       too. During the US antitrust trial, Nadella testified that Google's
       exclusive, multibillion-dollar deals with the likes of Apple Inc., as
       the default on smartphones and browsers, have essentially locked out
       Microsoft's Bing. Google has been able to make its search engine
       better because, as the default, it gets more user queries, which in
       turn lead to better search results, Nadella argued.
        
       Pichai meanwhile says he's trying to keep focused and not "play to
       someone else's dance music."
        
       "People tend to focus in this micro moment, but it is so small in the
       context of what's ahead," Pichai says. "When I look at the
       opportunities ahead, across everything we do, I put a lot of chips, at
       least from my perspective, on Google."
        
       This episode of The Circuit With Emily Chang debuts Wednesday, May 8,
       at 6 p.m. in New York on Bloomberg Television, on the Bloomberg app,
       Bloomberg.com and the Bloomberg Originals YouTube Channel. Check out
       The Circuit podcast for extended conversations.
        
       \--With assistance from Lauren Ellis, Julia Love and Davey Alba.
        
       ©2024 Bloomberg L.P.
        
        
        
        
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