Foreign media commentators believe that the controversy surrounding AI is spreading from the tech community to the broader user market. A TechCrunch discussion article noted that as Google continues to add AI features to search, some users are starting to switch to other services, creating new growth opportunities for products positioned as "anti-AI."
DuckDuckGo installations are increasing.
The article points out that Google faces a dilemma: it needs to keep up with the competition in generative AI while potentially undermining the core user experience that users are most familiar with. For many long-time users, Google's brand foundation remains information retrieval, rather than transaction-oriented services such as shopping and booking.
The article cites DuckDuckGo as saying that after Google announced further enhancements to the AI experience in search, the search engine saw a 30% increase in installs. While still far smaller than Google, this at least demonstrates that there is a segment of users in the market who clearly do not welcome the deep integration of AI into the search experience.
Alternative products are beginning to adjust their positioning.
The article states that some alternative search products, which previously attempted to emphasize AI features, are now separating these features from the core search experience, or even downplaying their promotion. This shift reflects that some companies are using "less AI" or "optional AI" as a differentiating selling point.
Commentators believe this divergence could also present opportunities for startups. This is because users have differing attitudes towards AI, and the market no longer solely rewards products that "fully integrate AI"; retaining traditional user experiences can also become a competitive advantage.
The gap between CEOs and employment is widening.
The commentary also mentioned the views of Box founder Aaron Levie. Levie believes that some tech company CEOs have a certain "fanatical" attitude towards AI because they are too far removed from the final stage of the workflow that truly creates value, and therefore tend to overestimate AI's short-term capabilities.
The article also points out that the impact of AI on employment is uneven. Jobs such as software development are experiencing changes earlier and more directly, while the impact is relatively slower in more physical sectors like manufacturing, transportation, and robotics. Currently, companies' expectations for AI-driven efficiency improvements often seem to be driven by top-down management, which continues to draw attention to the relationship between AI and layoffs and organizational downsizing.












