Google insists artificial intelligence will expand how people explore information. Yet in courtrooms across the U.S., its lawyers are warning that AI could undermine the very business that made Google a trillion-dollar company.
This contradiction captures the tightrope Google is walking in 2025, balancing the promise of AI with the fear that it might one day make “Googling” obsolete.
Liz Reid’s Vision: AI as a New Window to the Web
Liz Reid, Google’s head of search, believes AI Overviews, short summaries built into search results, will enhance discovery, not kill it.
According to Google, more people are searching than ever, even as AI assistants like ChatGPT and Grok become mainstream.
Her argument: users still need links, context, and confirmation, something only search can provide. But critics say these “AI answers” are slowly training people to stop clicking altogether.
The Competitors Smell Opportunity
Microsoft’s partnership with OpenAI has turned Bing into a quiet challenger. With just 4 percent of global market share, it’s nowhere near Google’s dominance, yet every AI feature it launches chips away at habits that once seemed unbreakable.
Even Apple is entering the race, experimenting with how Siri and ChatGPT blend inside iPhones. The result? For the first time in two decades, Google isn’t the default destination for curiosity.
Why AI Threatens the Old Business Model
Search ads are Google’s golden goose. But if AI delivers full answers on the results page, fewer people click ads. That means less revenue, and more urgency to reinvent how information is monetized in the AI era.
In short, the more “helpful” AI becomes, the more it risks erasing the behavior that powers Google’s empire.
A Future Where Searching Feels Different
Google isn’t trying to kill search; it’s trying to redefine it before someone else does.
The company’s Gemini-based AI Overviews already reach billions monthly, blending machine summaries with source links. It’s impressive, but it also signals the start of a new era, one where search feels more like a conversation than a query.
Whether this shift expands curiosity or narrows it will decide the fate of not just Google, but the web itself.
Also Read: Microsoft Brings AI to Classrooms — But Are Schools Ready?.

