惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
GbyAI
GbyAI
P
Proofpoint News Feed
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
A
About on SuperTechFans
T
Tenable Blog
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
IT之家
IT之家
I
Intezer
D
DataBreaches.Net
爱范儿
爱范儿
T
Threatpost
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
K
Kaspersky official blog
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
A
Arctic Wolf
Y
Y Combinator Blog
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
H
Help Net Security
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
博客园 - 聂微东
C
Check Point Blog
S
Securelist
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
雷峰网
雷峰网
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
D
Docker
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
G
Google Developers Blog
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
L
LangChain Blog

CNET

Netflix: 29 of the Best Sci-Fi TV Shows You Should Stream Right Now Wait! Don't Buy the Galaxy S26 Ultra. This Cheaper Phone Is Just as Good Best Cheap Phone of 2026: You Don’t Need to Pay a Lot for Your Next Phone Best Streaming Services of 2026 14 of the Best Peacock Shows to Watch This Weekend Best Standing Desks of 2026 44 of the Best Movies on Netflix You Should Stream Now Best Live TV Streaming Services of 2026 7 of the Best A24 Movies You Can Stream Free on Your Next Movie Night Hisense's Colorful RGB TV, the UR8, Hits Shelves From $1,300 60 of the Best TV Shows on Netflix That Will Keep You Entertained I Need Apple to Finally Launch Its Foldable iPhone Flip in 2026 Best Senior Phone Plans of 2026 Apple Should Steal These Android Camera Tricks for the iPhone 18 Pro Samsung Messages Is Going Away for Good. Here's How to Save Everything First Disney Plus: 30 Best TV Shows You Should Stream Right Now Get the Best Deals Handpicked and Texted to You Prime Video: 23 of the Best Sci-Fi TV Shows You Need to Stream Right Now Prime Video: 11 of the Best Sci-Fi Movies You Should Stream Right Now AI Chatbot Pricing Comparison: Here's What You Get When You Pay Best TVs for 2026: Expert Tested and Reviewed Apple TV: 28 of the Best Shows You're Probably Not Watching YouTube TV vs. DirecTV vs. Hulu Live and More: Which Has the Most Must-Have Channels Out of 100? Amazon Support for Older Kindles Ends Today. What to Do Now Best MacBooks We’ve Tested (May 2026) After Brewing 17 Bags of Grocery Store Coffee, These Are the 5 Beans I'd Buy Again I Tested the Best Budget TVs Head-to-Head. This One Was Shockingly Good Best Laptops of 2026: Top Picks Tested by CNET Netflix: 24 Must-See Fantasy TV Shows You Should Stream Right Now AI Is Watching Your Every Move on the Road. These State Laws Are Pushing Back Trump Phone Looks Different, Has No Launch Date, Isn't Made in America Best T-Mobile Plans: How to Choose and Which Ones to Pick in 2026 Apple TV: 16 Best Sci-Fi Shows You Should Stream Right Now The Apple Watch Series 12 Is Rumored to Revive a Retired iPhone Feature Does Tech Actually Suck Now or Have I Just Become a Grumpy Old Man? Making Sense of AT&T's Hiked Prices for Legacy Phone Plans I've Tested Dozens of 3D Printers and These Are the Best for Everyone Best Cellphone Plans of 2026: Our Top Picks Best Family Phone Plans for 2026 Best Prepaid Phone Plans for 2026 Gaming at the Gym? Here's How to Sneak Some Playtime Into Workouts Another Mac Mini Option Goes MIA as Memory Shortage Rages On I Resurrected My Favorite Childhood Games Using Gemini Vibe Coding Best VPN for iPhone 2026: Boost Your Privacy on the Go Best VR Headsets of 2026: My Favorite Hardware Right Now Verizon's Streaming Deals Let You Watch Netflix, Disney Plus and More, for Less Motorola's $150 Moto Watch Fell Short of Its Fitness Promises in My Tests Best Home Theater Systems of 2026 Speed vs. Depth: How Does Using AI for Work Affect Our Confidence? Motorola's Razr Is Days Away From Its iPhone Moment Apple iPhone 20: Everything We Know About the Drastic Redesign Coming in 2027 Play One of the Best Games of 2025 Right Now on Xbox Game Pass Don't Wait for the iPhone 18. Just Get Apple's iPhone 17 Motorola Razr 2026 Rumor Roundup: Everything We Know About The New Razr Flip Phones I Made My Phone Photos Look Like Analog Film. Here's How You Can, Too Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Friday, April 17 Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 17, #571 Opera Adds Browser Connector Feature to Integrate AI Chatbots Into Browsers Roblox Will Pay $12 Million to Settle Nevada Child Safety Lawsuit Swiss Privacy Goes Global: Proton VPN Grows Coverage to 145 Countries The Best iPhone 17 Cases for 2026 NordVPN Now Covers Every State in New Server Expansion Tapo Releases Ultrapowerful Dual-Lens Camera Kit for Complete Yard Coverage Netflix Is Introducing Vertical Video to Its Mobile App This Month DuckDuckGo VPN Audit Shows It Doesn't Track Your Activity Class-Action Suit Claims Amazon 'Bricked' Early Fire TV Streaming Sticks Maine Could Be the First State to Pass a Temporary Ban on New Large Data Centers Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 17, #1041 Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 17 #775 Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 17, #1763 Planet Parade in the Sky: How to View 4 Planets Lined Up This Week Meta Raises Prices on Quest 3 and Quest 3S Due to RAM Shortage No, Anthropic's New Claude Opus 4.7 Model Is Not Mythos Preview AMC Monthly Movies Price Hike: Here's How Your Plan Is Changing Apple Products Now Contain 30% Recycled Materials. Their Packaging Boasts Zero Plastic After a Decade, Vitamix Is Axing One of Its Most Popular (and Affordable) Blenders. Here's Why After a Decade, Vitamix Is Axing One of Its Most Popular (and Affordable) Blenders. Here's Why These New Codex Updates Are the 'First Phase' of OpenAI's Dream Super App Google Is Adding New Ways to Use AI Mode in Chrome Character.AI Will Use AI to Let You Play a Character in Your Favorite Book Should You Buy a Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum? The Answer Isn't So Simple Canva Really Wants to Be Your Workplace AI Bestie The Best Part of the New Moto G Stylus Phone Is a Pen I Actually Use DJI Osmo Pocket 4 Is a Great Vlogging Camera, but Not for the US Little Caesars Wants ChatGPT to Order Your Pizza for You This iPhone Search Bar Hack Makes Navigating Your Call History Easy New AT&T Elite 2.0 Phone Plan Boosts Wireless Hotspot and Data Performance Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Thursday, April 16 Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 16, #570 Stuck in a Coffee Rut? ChatGPT Can Now Plan Your Next Starbucks Order Best Power Bank for iPhones in 2026 Spotify Champions Live Music With Independent Music Venue Deal Google Will Pay $135M to Android Phone Owners. Learn Who's Eligible and How to Get Paid Apple Reportedly Plans to Send Siri Engineers to AI Coding Bootcamp Apple Reportedly Threatened to Remove Grok From App Store Over Deepfakes ADT Introduces a Glowing Warning Sign and New Emergency Options for Home Security Spotify Lets Listeners Turn Audiobooks Into Bookstore Purchases Scientists Use AI to Map Ocean Currents in Incredible Detail Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, Squirrel With a Gun and More Are Coming to PlayStation Plus in April MacOS Now Has a Native Gemini AI App
Google's Content Revenue Reaper Is Coming for Video Creators on YouTube
David Lumb · 2026-05-20 · via CNET

Commentary: Just as AI Overviews are starving digital publishers of search traffic, AI-driven YouTube features will likely trigger a drop-off in video creation.

Headshot of David Lumb

David Lumb is a managing editor for the mobile team, covering mobile and gaming spaces. Over the last decade, he's reviewed phones for TechRadar as well as covered tech, gaming, and culture for Engadget, Popular Mechanics, NBC Asian America, Increment, Fast Company and others. As a true Californian, he lives for coffee, beaches and burritos.

Expertise Smartphones | Gaming | Telecom industry | Mobile semiconductors | Mobile gaming

At a briefing ahead of Google I/O 2026, I watched company execs unveil a list of AI-powered features aimed at solving pain points across its software ecosystem. 

One tool promises to radically improve the quality of video searches: Ask YouTube, as it's called, scours the platform's catalog of long-form videos and Shorts to surface content relevant to more complex queries. 

At first glance, that sounds like a win for both YouTube viewers and creators. Ask YouTube, however, takes an extra step -- it directs searchers to a video that answers their query and zeroes in on the relevant timestamp. Get in, get your answer, get out. 

But if people don't stay to watch an entire video, or at least most of it, this threatens the ways video creators make money and build a following. YouTubers need a large subscriber base, which leads to more ad revenue, sponsorships, affiliate links and fan funding. 

In other words, Google's pursuit of user convenience could directly defund the creators who power its platform. Goodbye, ad revenue. So long, community building.

How Google's Ask YouTube feature will look.

Google

Google made a similar move when it introduced AI Overviews in late 2024, ranking readers over publishers that had long relied on traffic from the search engine results page. By scraping information from media sites and summarizing it at the top of search results, AI Overviews reduce clicks to other websites by 58%, according to a February report by marketing and research firm Ahrefs. (Google claimed that "links included in AI Overviews get more clicks than if the page had appeared as a traditional web listing for that query.")

In the opening minutes of last year's Google I/O 2025 keynote, Google CEO Sundar Pichai bragged that AI Overviews -- a feature that can't be turned off and automatically appears -- had over 1.5 billion users per month. Alongside today's Google I/O 2026 keynote, Pichai penned a blog post noting that the feature had grown to over 2.5 billion users per month.

The cannibalization of referral traffic by Google's generative AI Overviews appears to be a predictive model for video platforms. The Ask YouTube feature, as described, will direct you to the point in a video answering their question, after which you'll likely have little or no incentive to stay. Viewers likely won't get a sense of the channel's subject and vibe, nor will they keep watching to engage with its charm or storytelling. 

Google's "solution" is to surgically excise creator content to funnel YouTube viewers to answers. In essence, it would replace YouTubers' revenue streams by harvesting their data and expertise, potentially undermining their entire business model.

Ask YouTube is initially coming to YouTube Premium subscribers, but the company plans to roll it out to the whole platform at some point. 

google search with agentic coding at google i/o 2026 event
Google/Screenshot by CNET

Coding Search answers on the fly -- instead of finding the right YouTube video

Google introduced endless AI features during its I/O keynote, but some are more subtle in their efforts to replace content creators' revenue streams. Search has some integrations with intriguing capabilities, including using the new Gemini 3.5 Flash's AI agent capabilities to code simple, quick software on the fly. For example, from a basic request, it can build a wedding or travel-planning widget that surfaces relevant info and deadlines right in the browser window.

But this so-called agentic coding has another use case that Google demonstrated in the briefing. Say you asked a question about a specific part of astrophysics, like black holes -- to answer, Gemini 3.5 Flash could craft an interactive visual simulation to demonstrate how an elaborate concept works. Google calls it "generative UI."

google search with agentic coding at google i/o 2026 event

An example of "agentic coding" creating a simulation of the physics of black holes within search results.

Google/Screenshot by CNET

I would hope that most people seeking to understand black holes would turn to a reputable publication with high-quality space and science journalism. But realistically, I'd expect many folks to head to YouTube to see a complex astrophysics concept broken down visually in a well-produced video. Why would they bother if Gemini 3.5 Flash whips up a simulation straight from search results? 

There's a lot of uncertainty, especially around the quality and precision of simulated answers generated by the new Gemini model. Yet even if they're occasionally inaccurate, the convenience seems to outweigh their trustworthiness. 

Despite AI Overviews telling people to eat rocks back in 2024 and providing other misinformation, people still use it instead of scrolling down the page. The AI startup Oumi, quoted by The New York Times, estimated that AI Overviews using the newer Gemini 3 model were accurate 91% of the time. A handful of health care organizations and charities told The Guardian that AI Overviews gave inaccurate suggestions for searches on pancreatic cancer, liver disease and other serious health conditions.

I wouldn't be surprised if the explosion of new AI functionality in Search leads to fewer people looking up answers in videos. Search can't replace streamers (yet), but a whole category of YouTube content -- explainers, how-tos and walkthroughs -- could see a drop in traffic if viewers don't venture beyond their AI-generated search query results. And they'll miss out on all the curious, weird, wild people making videos to share with the world.

As AI Overviews reduce clicks outside Google's ecosystem, YouTube's conversational AI and Google's generative search simulations threaten to shrink video content production. And that creates a paradox: If creators stop making informative content due to a lack of traffic and compensation, AI models won't have the datasets they need to generate future answers. 

Ultimately, Google is building its empire of "convenience" on the back of uncompensated creators.

Headshot of David Lumb

David Lumb is a managing editor for the mobile team, covering mobile and gaming spaces. Over the last decade, he's reviewed phones for TechRadar as well as covered tech, gaming, and culture for Engadget, Popular Mechanics, NBC Asian America, Increment, Fast Company and others. As a true Californian, he lives for coffee, beaches and burritos.