logo
Google reserves best search data for Gemini, not rival AI apps

Google reserves best search data for Gemini, not rival AI apps

The Star07-05-2025

Google last year began offering some artificial intelligence firms a way to anchor chatbot responses in its search results, but still reserves key features for its own AI service, Gemini, a company executive testified.
Liz Reid, Google's head of search, was describing in court on May 6 how the Alphabet Inc unit handles requests for its data to be used by artificial intelligence models.
Google has been pushing back on a proposal by the US Justice Department that the company share much of the data it collects to build its search results. Reid's testimony that Google's current practices favour its own AI service may bolster arguments by antitrust enforcers for a more level playing field.
Starting in May 2024, Google began offering a 'grounding' service within Vertex AI, its app developer platform offered by Google Cloud, which allows AI models to check Google's web results as part of generating a response to increase its accuracy. More than a dozen companies now use the service, according to court documents shown in court, though the names were redacted from public display.
In response to questions by a government lawyer, Reid acknowledged a disparity between what companies receive when they pay for grounding via Vertex and what Gemini gets as part of the Google family.
'The web results it provides are the same,' Reid said of Vertex AI. But Google 'is providing additional results' to Gemini in the form of search features like the Knowledge Graph, which describes relationships between entities, or the OneBox, which offers instant results to some queries like sports scores or flight information.
Reid, who took over as head of search in 2024, has overseen some of the most meaningful changes to Google Search in years, including the rollout of AI Overviews, in which the company uses AI to respond directly to some search queries.
Last year, US District Judge Amit Mehta found the company illegally monopolised the online search market. He is currently holding a three-week hearing on what changes he should order to Google's business to remedy the illegal conduct.
The Justice Department has asked that Mehta force Google to share much of the data the company collects to build its search results. That would allow AI companies to help develop their own search indices to provide grounding.
AI startup Anthropic PBM has requested some additional access to Google's search data for its Claude model, according to the documents, but Reid said she wasn't sure if that has been approved. Google has invested about US$3bil (RM12.71bil) in Anthropic, which also has investment from Amazon.com Inc.
Meta Platforms Inc chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg has said publicly that his company's AI models use Google for grounding. Earlier in the trial, an OpenAI executive said the ChatGPT maker approached Google last August about using its search index, but the Alphabet unit declined.
During her testimony, Reid said the Justice Department's data-sharing proposal – which she called 'extensive and invasive' – would provide rivals with 'a huge treasure trove of data' that would likely make them the target of hackers. She also estimated that as many as 2,000 Google engineers would be diverted from improving Google's products to compliance issues if the Justice Department's proposal were adopted.
Under questioning, Reid acknowledged that she hadn't shared that estimate internally, calling it a 'rough estimate' she created in consultation with Google's legal team on the case.
Reid was also critical of the agency's proposal that would allow websites more ability to opt out of Google's AI products. Google already offers websites some opt-out ability, she said, but the granularity of the DOJ's proposal would be 'challenging' to implement because the company doesn't always use different models for each feature. – Bloomberg

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chile, Google sign deal for first-ever S.America-Asia fiber optic cable
Chile, Google sign deal for first-ever S.America-Asia fiber optic cable

The Sun

time10 hours ago

  • The Sun

Chile, Google sign deal for first-ever S.America-Asia fiber optic cable

SANTIAGO: Chile and Google inked an agreement Wednesday for the installation of the first-ever submarine fiber optic cable between South America, Asia and Oceania by 2027. South America relies for its digital connectivity on infrastructure running through North America, and the new multi-million dollar will provide a faster alternative. 'This cable not only meets a technical need, but also represents a bet on resilience, diversification of digital routes, and the opening up of new possibilities for international collaboration,' Foreign Minister Alberto van Klaveren said at the signing ceremony in Santiago. Dubbed the 'Humboldt Project,' the 14,800-kilometer (nearly 9,200-mile) cable will run from Valparaiso on Chile's Pacific coast to Sydney, Australia, via French Polynesia. According to Google, this will be the first such cable to directly connect South America and the Asia-Pacific. When the partnership was first announced in January 2024, the Chilean government stated the cable would have a capacity of 144 terabytes per second and a lifespan of 25 years. It could also benefit other countries in the region such as Argentina, Paraguay, and Brazil. 'In an international context marked by growing geopolitical tensions and strategic competition... initiatives such as the Humboldt Project take on particular importance,' Van Klaveren said. The new cable will notably reduce 'latency' -- the lapse between sending and receiving a signal, added Transport and Telecommunications Minister Juan Carlos Munoz. 'This fraction of a second could make the difference between a good and a less good intervention' in the field of telemedicine, he said. Google has not disclosed the amount of its investment, but the head of state-owned company Desarrollo Pais, Patricio Rey, said the original price tag had been estimated at between $300 million and $550 million. The Chilean state will contribute $25 million.

Chile, Google sign deal
Chile, Google sign deal

The Sun

time10 hours ago

  • The Sun

Chile, Google sign deal

SANTIAGO: Chile and Google inked an agreement Wednesday for the installation of the first-ever submarine fiber optic cable between South America, Asia and Oceania by 2027. South America relies for its digital connectivity on infrastructure running through North America, and the new multi-million dollar will provide a faster alternative. 'This cable not only meets a technical need, but also represents a bet on resilience, diversification of digital routes, and the opening up of new possibilities for international collaboration,' Foreign Minister Alberto van Klaveren said at the signing ceremony in Santiago. Dubbed the 'Humboldt Project,' the 14,800-kilometer (nearly 9,200-mile) cable will run from Valparaiso on Chile's Pacific coast to Sydney, Australia, via French Polynesia. According to Google, this will be the first such cable to directly connect South America and the Asia-Pacific. When the partnership was first announced in January 2024, the Chilean government stated the cable would have a capacity of 144 terabytes per second and a lifespan of 25 years. It could also benefit other countries in the region such as Argentina, Paraguay, and Brazil. 'In an international context marked by growing geopolitical tensions and strategic competition... initiatives such as the Humboldt Project take on particular importance,' Van Klaveren said. The new cable will notably reduce 'latency' -- the lapse between sending and receiving a signal, added Transport and Telecommunications Minister Juan Carlos Munoz. 'This fraction of a second could make the difference between a good and a less good intervention' in the field of telemedicine, he said. Google has not disclosed the amount of its investment, but the head of state-owned company Desarrollo Pais, Patricio Rey, said the original price tag had been estimated at between $300 million and $550 million. The Chilean state will contribute $25 million.

Huawei's Pura X is an intriguing new foldable – if you're outside the US
Huawei's Pura X is an intriguing new foldable – if you're outside the US

The Star

time10 hours ago

  • The Star

Huawei's Pura X is an intriguing new foldable – if you're outside the US

In most of the world, the smartphone market is dominated by two players: Alphabet Inc's Android and Apple Inc's iOS. But China's Huawei Technologies Co is looking to challenge that long-held reality with its in-house mobile platform, HarmonyOS. Since launching late last year, the software has already become the most credible contender to that duopoly in China. The company has even unveiled a companion laptop-grade operating system to replace Windows. Huawei's new phone embodies Beijing's efforts to reduce its reliance on the US tech industry. But its efforts to establish independence in the software realm won't mean much without cutting-edge devices that can serve as vehicles to showcase its new platform. The recently launched Pura X foldable isn't just a hardware novelty; it's also the company's first flagship smartphone to run HarmonyOS out of the box, making it an early test of how willing users will be to jump ship for a largely untested – and still incomplete – ecosystem. The Pura X is only being sold in China, a market where most of the top-selling smartphone brands are local players. The way some Huawei salespeople are pitching the Pura X to consumers is to suggest they think of this as their second phone. At least to begin with. Stick with whatever you already have, add the Pura X as a multimedia and content consumption device, and give Huawei time to flesh out the HarmonyOS experience. That requires a measure of faith. The hardware With a 3.5-inch external screen (that's small, even for a foldable), the 7,499 yuan (US$1,042/RM4,420) Pura X looks at first glance like a pocket-friendly clamshell. But unlike modern flip phones, which unfold into the same rectangular shape as a flat handset, the Pura X opens to a significantly wider 6.3-inch display with a 16:10 aspect ratio. The novel ergonomics take some getting used to – the device's hinge and external display are arranged so that it opens like a book – but there are benefits to the squarer shape, whose expansive screen real estate is useful for viewing photos, browsing the web, going through notes, playing video games, watching video and reading. For those using the device as an e-reader, Huawei's built-in ebook app flips pages automatically by tracking when the reader's eyes move from the bottom of a page back to the top. It's an example of how Huawei sees itself marrying hardware and software development in the new operating system. The screen has benefits for third-party apps, too. The popular Chinese social media app Xiaohongshu, also known as RedNote, displays content on the Pura X in three columns simultaneously, compared with the standard two-column layout on conventional smartphones. The smaller exterior panel allows users to handle calls, watch video or show their Alipay QR code for making payments. With WeChat, for example, it's easy to send a text message or take video calls without unfolding the device. In that scenario, the rear camera acts as a selfie shooter. The downside of the wider screen is that it's not easy to fold or unfold the phone with one hand. Typing on the enlarged keyboard one-handed is also tricky. Huawei offers a single-handed mode on the Pura X for typing on a smaller layout, but that's not much of an improvement. The Huawei-designed processor inside the Pura X is an upgraded Kirin chip, which makes the device feel smooth and quick during use. The 4,610mAh battery lasts for a full day with typical usage. The Pura X has three cameras on the back plus a fourth lens for gauging color temperature. The image quality feels natural, with low-light performance being a standout compared with other flip phones. The software Huawei debuted an earlier version of the OS on Mate 70 smartphones last year and has since been migrating more of its existing device lineup to the platform. Every new gadget from the company will run the software. Unlike with the new Pura X, people who own older handsets can still choose between the in-house OS and an Android-compatible system. When Bloomberg tested out the earliest publicly available iteration of HarmonyOS four months ago, it was evident Huawei had work to do behind the scenes to get more app makers and service providers on board. Since then, more developers have joined the ecosystem. And for some apps that were already in place, their engineers added missing features to bring them closer to the fuller-featured versions offered on iOS and Android. Yet challenges still lie ahead. The most used consumer apps in China are on HarmonyOS, including selections for online shopping, messaging, food delivery, banking, ride-hailing and train tickets. Messaging apps commonly used at workplaces in China are here, and so are popular live-streaming platforms and some video games. As electric vehicles gain ubiquity across China, EV drivers can also download apps connecting to their cars. Progress since Bloomberg's last review of the OS includes the arrival of chatbots from Chinese artificial intelligence firms, like ByteDance Ltd.'s Doubao. For people who work for Chinese government agencies, some essential daily tools are also newly available. For everyday consumers, several public services have been added, including one for carrying digital versions of driving licenses and paying fines for traffic violations. But there are still some holdouts, like Xiaomi Corp and Tesla Inc's electric-vehicle apps, and NetEase Inc.'s email and music offerings. Meanwhile, some applications that are technically available are missing features offered on other mobile platforms. Huawei knows its ecosystem is incomplete. For certain software that isn't available yet, the company offers a tool called DroiTong for people to download Android-compatible alternatives to bridge the gap. And on the Pura X page of Huawei's e-commerce website, a warning written in red type reminds people that "This device comes pre-installed with HarmonyOS 5 and cannot be downgraded to earlier OS versions.' The takeaway The Pura X is not Huawei's first attempt at a quirky foldable. Last year, it launched the Mate XT, a device it billed as the first "trifold' phone – which is to say, depending on how you folded it up, it could be a large widescreen tablet, a smaller 8-inch one or a more regular handset. The design was intriguing as a proof-of-concept, but at US$2,800 (RM 11,877) it was a tough sell for real-world consumers. To be sure, the Pura X is more practical and affordable than the Mate XT. Even so, looking at an operating system still under construction, potential buyers will have to weigh the benefits of a unique hardware design against the tradeoffs of an incomplete ecosystem. Patience is required – but Huawei's pace of improvement shows it's at least on its way. – Bloomberg

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store