ChatGPT, developed by OpenAI, which is one of the elements where we can see the capabilities and benefactors of self-learning artificial intelligence, has gained great popularity in the world in recent months.
But of course ChatGPT also had response aggregating functions. The biggest one is that you can print articles to ChatGPT. Some sites even shared articles written by ChatGPT. A Google executive who gave an interview to Futurism stated that they will not block these articles.
“We look at whether the content is correct, not how it is produced”
Speaking to Futurism, Google Search public liaison manager Danny Sullivan mentioned in an interview that Google Search considers the accuracy of the information in a content rather than how it is produced:
“Our goal with search is to show useful and relevant content created for people, rather than search engine results rankings. Our ranking team focuses on the usefulness of the content rather than how the content is produced. This allows us to create solutions that aim to reduce any unhelpful content in search, whether produced by humans or through automated processes.”
However, this statement contradicts the policy of “content produced by experts, for people who research” of search engine results announced by Google last year. The reason for this is thought to be the claim that Google is developing a bot to rival ChatGPT.