Digital Disconnect: Google’s AI Overview Is Eating The News Industry Alive, One Search At A Time
Digital Disconnect: Why bother visiting a news website when Google’s AI can spoon-feed you the answer in a cheerful little summary box? That’s the philosophy quietly taking over the internet — and publishers are watching their traffic nosedive in real time.
According to a Wall Street Journal report, Google’s AI Overviews and chatbot-style answers are gutting news site referrals. Why click a blue link when a robot can recycle the information for you, often without crediting the original source? Welcome to the era of convenience — just not for the media industry.
Google first rolled out AI Overviews last year, neatly packaging search results into bite-sized summaries. Travel guides, health blogs, product reviews? Crushed. And now there’s “AI Mode,” Google’s answer to ChatGPT, which takes things further by chatting with users in a human-like tone — all while casually dropping fewer links to actual news sites.
The New York Times, Down But Not Out (Yet)
It’s not just a vague sense of doom — the numbers are here to back it up. In April 2025, only 36.5 per cent of The New York Times’ desktop and mobile traffic came from organic search, according to Similarweb data. That’s down from 44 per cent three years ago. So yes, people are still searching — just not landing where they used to.
Still, Google insists everything’s fine. At its May developer conference, the company said AI Overviews have boosted search traffic. For whom, exactly? They didn’t say. Certainly not for the publishers watching their numbers collapse like a Jenga tower.
Publishers Strike Deals… or Surrender
With old models crumbling, news outlets are scrambling for a Plan B. The Atlantic and The Washington Post have openly warned that unless the industry pivots fast, journalism as we know it is on borrowed time. Some have opted to do business with the bots instead of fighting them.
The New York Times recently licensed its content to Amazon to help train the tech giant’s AI platforms. The Atlantic has cut a deal with OpenAI. Even AI startup Perplexity is offering a silver lining — it plans to share advertising revenue with publishers when its chatbot uses their content to answer queries.
So, while the clicks dry up and the algorithms take over, the publishing world is left with two choices: adapt to the AI overlords… or get written out of the summary entirely.
Digital Disconnect is an ABP Live-exclusive column, where we explore the many admirable advancements the world of tech is seeing each day, and how they lead to a certain disconnect among users. Is the modern world an easier place to live in, thanks to tech? Definitely. Does that mean we don’t long for things to go back to the good-ol’ days? Well, look out for our next column to find out.
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