What you need to know
- Google is adding AI Overview and Preferred Source labels to AI mode for more reliable answers.
- AI Overview will now display an article carousel more prominently in Search.
- Google’s “highly cited” labels are being expanded to highlight original reporting in search results.
Google is making AI observations and searches more trustworthy by adding support for preferred sources and offering more native reporting directly inside AI-generated results.
AI mode in Google Search has now become a major part of the core Google experience. The company also highlighted this during its recent earnings call AI-powered search is accelerating growth, and Google even gave Search a big makeover at its I/O earlier this month. now the company announcement of Another major change aimed at improving trust and credibility in AI-generated answers.
Taking Android Central
I think it would have been much better if Google brought favorites labels directly into the AI ​​overview. Right now, it looks like the labels only appear when users hover over the Sources section or look at the links panel on the right. Still, it’s at least a step in the right direction.
Google says it’s bringing its Preferred Source feature directly to AI Overview and AI Mode. Preferred sources are already built into regular Google searches, allowing users to select the websites and publishers they trust most.
Now, the same publishers will appear more prominently with a preferred label inside AI-generated answers. Google says users who interact with preferred sources are twice as likely to click on them compared to general search links.
And on that note, if you haven’t already Added us as a preferred source on GoogleMaybe consider doing that.
However, the big update here is how Google is now displaying actual articles more prominently below the AI ​​overview. For example, when you search for a topic or breaking news, Google will now display a more visible carousel of original reporting below the AI-generated summary, just as the top stories currently appear in regular search.
Google is also expanding its “highly cited” labels throughout search. These labels are meant to highlight original reporting that is frequently referenced by other outlets, helping users identify more authoritative sources.
This all comes just days after former Eric Schmidt was loudly rebuked for talking about AI during a graduation speech. It’s quite clear that Google isn’t slowing down its AI push anytime soon. Whatever it is, the company is spending double on it.
But, at least, it appears that Google is finally trying to preserve and surface original publisher content more visually alongside AI-generated answers.
