The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - Does AI Search Threaten the Business Model of the Internet?
Episode Date: May 9, 2025AI search engines like OpenAI and Perplexity are changing how we find information online, moving users away from traditional links toward instant summaries. Apple is preparing Safari for this shift, p...otentially threatening Google's dominant role and its ad-based revenue model. Plus, the Trump administration is rolling back the Biden-era AI diffusion rule that limited AI chip exports, aiming for a simplified approach. Meanwhile, OpenAI introduces the "AI for Countries" initiative to help nations build AI infrastructure. Get Ad Free AI Daily Brief: https://patreon.com/AIDailyBriefBrought to you by:KPMG – Go to https://kpmg.com/ai to learn more about how KPMG can help you drive value with our AI solutions.Blitzy.com - Go to https://blitzy.com/ to build enterprise software in days, not months The Agent Readiness Audit from Superintelligent - Go to https://besuper.ai/ to request your company's agent readiness score.The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614Subscribe to the newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/Join our Discord: https://bit.ly/aibreakdownInterested in sponsoring the show? nlw@breakdown.network
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Today on the AI Daily Brief, we are talking AI for countries.
And before that in the headlines, AI search and the disruption to the fundamental business model of the internet.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
Thanks to today's sponsors, blitzie, super intelligent, and Vertice Labs.
And to get an ad-free version of the show, go to patreon.com slash AI Daily Brief.
Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief Headlines edition, all the daily AI news you need in around five minutes.
There's no doubt that AI is changing the way.
that we interact with the internet. And one of the clearest examples of this is our habits around
search. For a couple of decades, the starting point experience for the internet was to go to Google,
ask a question, search for something you were looking for, and get a whole bunch of links that you
have to progressively go through to find the right answers. Now, that supported the business model
of the internet because that process drove clicks to all these different sites. Search economics were
at the core of how the internet functioned, and all of that is, of course, changing. A great example
of this came in recent testimony in the Google antitrust case, where it was revealed that Apple is,
quote, actively looking at revamping Safari to focus on AI-powered search engines.
Senior VP of Services Eddie Q said that he believes that AI search providers like OpenAI,
perplexity, and Anthropic will eventually replace traditional Google search.
He intends to bring all of those options to Safari in the future, stating, we will add
them to the list, they probably won't be the default.
Q mentioned that Apple has already had some discussions with perplexity about adding them
to the platform.
The discussion comes as part of the remedies portion of the Google trial, which is nominally about
how to force the company to relinquish their monopoly on search.
However, testimony has progressively turned to new monopoly issues regarding AI.
Q mentioned that the search segment is more wide open than it's ever been, stating,
prior to AI, my feeling around this was none of the others were valid choices.
I think today there is a much greater potential because there are new entrants attacking the problem
in a different way.
He feels that the switch to AI search is inevitable, adding,
there's enough money now, enough large players, that I don't see how it doesn't happen.
Now, Q also did mention that AI search isn't quite good enough in its current form,
but he doesn't expect that to last long.
Indeed, he says that they expect to have AI search options in Safari by the end of the year.
It was also noted that search volume on Safari declined for the first time ever last month,
a shift that Q attributes to the increased use of AI.
And this shift also highlights the changing monetization of the Internet.
Q, for his part, said he's losing sleep over the possibility of losing their revenue-sharing agreement with Google on search,
and Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince recently spoke at the Council on Foreign Relations to talk about exactly this.
AI is going to fundamentally change the business model of the web.
The business model of the web for the last 15 years has been searched.
One way or another, search drives, everything that happens online.
Prince went on to explain that in the early days, for every two-page of data that Google scraped, websites would receive on average one visitor,
that rate is now down to one visitor per six pages of data.
Prince commented that the thing that's changed is that, quote,
75% of the queries that get put into Google get answered without you leaving Google.
They get answered on that page.
Ten years ago, you might get sent to a Wikipedia page.
Today, the answer comes right up on the page.
The consequence of that is that content creators,
if they were deriving value through subscriptions or putting up ads
or even just the ego that someone is reading your stuff, that's gone.
Prince concluded,
the business model of the web can't survive unless there's some change.
Now, the market took all of this very harshly. Google shares were way down following this testimony,
and CNBC's Dear Drobosa said that even though Google is obviously involved in disrupting itself
with this, Apple's comments on Google search confirms investors' worst fear. The AI shift is here
and Google didn't move fast enough. Innovator's dilemma is real. Google shares down greater than 8%.
Others are more skeptical. Talon Sharp Edge writes,
the market isn't reacting to fundamentals, it's reacting to headlines and vibes. One whiff of Apple might
to AI search and alphabet drops like it got margin called by Skynet. Meanwhile, Apple hasn't shipped
a decent piece of software innovations since Steve Jobs' hoodie era. Siri still thinks call mom means
opening your calendar. Their actual AI moves are mostly rebranding and wrapping third-party models
likely Google or open AI. And yet Wall Street thinks this is the death knell for Google search.
Bloomberg's Mark German had a different take that I think is pretty interesting. He basically said
that this is Apple trying to save its search deal by selling the court on the idea that Google is
outdated and the iPhone is dying. As he puts it, in other words, the deal doesn't matter anyways,
so no one needs to break it up. I think there definitely could be some truth to this. And David Barnard
continued, that's the thing about regulation. By the time regulators take action, the market has
often already started shifting by natural forces. Next up, a follow-on to story from earlier this
week. More details are emerging as OpenAI tries to restructure their deal with Microsoft. As you'll
well know, OpenAI recently announced that they were changing their plans around a conversion to a for-profit
company, but one of the sticking points had been Microsoft, who are owed a revenue share based on their
early stage investment. Some suggested the deal could be worth over $130 billion. Bloomberg reported
on Monday that Microsoft was the key holdout among investors as OpenAI attempted to complete
their new restructuring plan. New reporting from the information gave some insights into the
state of the negotiations. Citing financial documents, they report that OpenAI has told investors that
they expect a revenue share to be cut in half by the end of the decade. Reportedly, the existing
terms were that OpenAI would share 20% of its top line revenue with Microsoft, alongside a 49% share of
profits, capped at $92 billion. The company said that they expect the revenue share to drop to 10%
by 2030. This might not end up being that much of a discount. After negotiations around the AGI
clause earlier this year, Microsoft reported that their contract will run until 2030 rather than until
Open AI achieves AGI. The quid pro quo is that Microsoft wants to extend their access to open AIs technology
past 2030, according to documents cited by the information. Now, Microsoft hasn't signed off on anything
at this stage, so it could just represent wishful thinking on OpenAI's part. The report states that
some OpenAI leaders want Microsoft to exempt future profits from the existing revenue sharing agreement.
This is also one of the first times we've seen the figures laid out clearly. If OpenAI hits their
2030 revenue projections, Microsoft would cash in $97 billion just on the revenue share. Austin Allred
wrote, 20% of top line revenue until 2030 is crazy.
something you'd see on Shark Tank.
Lawyer and former FTC litigator, Megan Gray,
thinks the entire thing is unrealistic, posting,
this is one of the funniest things I've seen in a while.
OpenAI thinks that, A, it has leverage,
and B, Microsoft is willing to take on
significantly more antitrust risk
by converting RevShare to equity deal.
Dream on, Sammy.
Now, another Microsoft collaboration story,
although not with OpenAI this time,
Microsoft has signaled that they'll adopt
Google's agentic standard.
Last month, Google unveiled agent-to-agent,
an interoperability protocol that allows agents to communicate with each other. Microsoft has now announced
that they'll support A2A on their platform's Azure AI Foundry and co-pilot studio. They've also joined
the consortium of companies working to develop the protocol. In a blog post, Microsoft reinforced
how important these types of standards are, writing, by supporting A2A and building on our open
orchestration platform, or laying the foundation for the next generation of software, collaborative,
observable, and adaptive by design. The best agents won't live in one app or cloud. They'll operate in the
flow of work, spanning models, domains, and ecosystems. We're building that future with openness
at the center, because agents shouldn't be islands and intelligence should work across boundaries,
just like the world it serves. Now, we've previously covered the importance of AI companies
aligning on a single or small handful of standards in regards to Anthropics MCP, which now
enjoys support from OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, and many others. Rather than fight out a bitter
format war, AI companies seem to have decided to just agree on standards and move on. This means
that models should be pretty interchangeable with little vendor lock-in,
in this part of the infrastructure stack.
A-to-A does not have the same level of buy-in as MCP at this stage,
but Microsoft adopting the standard certainly helps.
Now, in launching A-to-A,
Google mentioned that the standard is meant as a complement to MCP rather than a competitor,
with each doing slightly different things.
MCP is about accessing data from external tooling,
while A-to-A is about allowing agents to share data between themselves.
Explaining how A-to-A will power advanced agent building, Microsoft wrote,
customers can build complex multi-agent workflows that span internal agents,
partner tools, and production infrastructure, while maintaining governance and service level agreements.
We're aligning with the broader industry push for shared agent protocols.
Lastly today, Mark Zuckerberg wants to build a fully automated AI ad platform.
Speaking at Stripe's annual sessions conference on Tuesday,
Zuck laid out his plans to create an end-to-end AI tool to upend the advertising industry.
He said,
The basic end goal here is any business can come to us, say what their objective is,
tell us how much they're willing to pay to achieve those results, connect their bank account,
and then we just deliver as many results as we can.
In a way, it's kind of like the ultimate business results machine.
I think it'd be one of the most important and valuable AI systems that gets built.
Now, the idea is basically to create thousands of AI-generated variations of ads for each customer,
cough, Dr. Strange Theory, cough, test them on meta-social networks and lean into the ones that get results.
Zuckerberg first laid out this idea on a podcast appearance last week,
proposing a system that's completely full service,
so advertisers wouldn't need to have the input on creative or even choose a demographic to target.
Not everyone's a fan of this. In a recent op-ed, John Hornby, the founder of Ad Agency, the and
partnership, argued that Zuckerberg doesn't understand how to build brands. He wrote,
Give AI another decade and it still won't come up with the truly big ideas that brands have been
built on over the past 30 years. Generative AI doesn't do leaps of imagination. It's trained on vast
datasets, finding the patterns and relationships that allow it to create ostensibly new content,
but these are just riffs on what's gone before. Artificial intelligence needs human intelligence
to make it sing. Now, on the one hand, John's not wrong here, but on the other hand, boy, are these
two talking about fundamentally different things. Zuckerberg isn't trying to cut humans out of the
Super Bowl ad process. He's not arguing that they can build brand better than an agency can.
Zuckerberg is focused on making the treadmill of social media advertising, in other words,
direct response advertising, not brand advertising, direct response advertising, as cheap and efficient
as possible. While TechCrunch calls this a social media nightmare,
This is pretty much just an indication of tech crunches barely contained loathing of the industry
they cover now. And also, it doesn't really matter because this is completely inevitable.
Social media advertising is already essentially a number crunching exercise to figure out what
works. Adding AI generated ads and automating the testing seems like the obvious next step.
Look, man, I've made Super Bowl ads. This is the part of the ad process that the only people
who truly love are the calculator brains who figured out how to game this system. The ad folks who
love their creative and go to Cann and do all that stuff, have nothing to worry about here.
But for the vast majority of small businesses and people who are just trying to sell stuff on the
internet, this is just likely to work a lot better. Anyways, friends, that obviously could be a whole
episode. But that is going to do it for this very extended edition of the headlines.
I had pre-recorded the main episode and saw that it was a little shorter than normal today,
so I decided it was okay to go a little long. But in any case, with that, let's move over
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Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief.
Today we are getting a little bit geopolitical
as OpenAI announces a new program for countries
and the Trump administration
has announced a potentially big change
to the way we're handling AI chip controls.
Let's start there and work our way backwards.
The TLDR is that Bloomberg is reporting
that the administration is planning to repeal
the so-called AI diffusion rule,
which was, of course, a midnight rule from the outgoing Biden administration
just one week before it's supposed to go into effect.
The rule you might remember separated the world into three tiers
with varying levels of export restrictions.
One of the most notable parts of this was that the second tier countries were tightly
limited in the number of advanced AI chips they could import,
and this tier included most of the world, including allied nations like India, Israel,
and South Korea.
The stated logic was that placing broad export controls would stem the tide of advanced
chips being passed into China via other countries.
Now, one of the points that I've made is that the diffusion rule was kind of actually working
towards cross-purposes.
The diffusion word in the rule referred both to stemming the diffusion of AI chips to China,
but also increasing the diffusion of American AI to other countries, but the way that
they seemed to be going about it sort of had those things at cross-purposes.
In any case, it was very controversial from the moment it was introduced.
Invidia and Oracle released open letters opposing the rule right away, with
Vindia stating that it would, quote, put global progress in jeopardy.
Another common complaint was that the rule was overly complex and difficult to enforce.
The Trump team appears to have picked up a little from each of those arguments in their reasoning.
In a statement, the Commerce Department said, the Biden-AI rule is overly complex,
overly bureaucratic, and would stymie American innovation.
We will be replacing it with a much simpler rule that unleashes American innovation and ensures
American AI dominance.
They also said that they plan to continue to strictly enforce previous chip controls on China,
and Bloomberg also reports that officials are planning on cracking down on countries like Malaysia and Thailand
that are suspected of diverting chips into China. Ultimately, the policy shift seems to be more about the question of
whether preventing exports to third countries with no history of smuggling is actually an effective way to curb the
development of AI in China. Invidia for their part have been championing the view that export controls on
allied nations is a wrong-headed way to go about the AI race. They held this view from the start,
but ramped up their rhetoric significantly over recent weeks. CEO Jensen Huang was,
in Washington last week and pushed officials to recognize that China had caught up with the U.S.,
not because of chip smuggling, but because of dedicated scientific work.
The big statement that resonated with the press that I mentioned numerous times last week
was when Jensen said, China's not behind. China's right behind us were very close.
This is a country with great will. They have great technical capacities.
50% of the world's AI researchers are Chinese. This is an industry that will have to compete for.
Overall, the tenor of Huang's visit to Washington was that the U.S. needs to fundamentally rethink
the way it's competing in AI to acknowledge recent Chinese breakthroughs. And while he was meeting
with administration officials to try to change the diffusion rule, which is obviously in his company's
interests, he appeared at least to be genuine in his concern that the U.S. was about to cut itself out
of the AI race. He said, I'm not sure what the new diffusion rule is going to be, but whatever it
turns out to be, it really has to recognize that the world has fundamentally changed since the
previous diffusion rule was released. Invita lauded the changes yesterday, releasing a statement which
said, we welcome the administration's leadership and new direction on AI policy. With the AI
diffusion rule revoked, America will have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to lead the next
industrial revolution and create high-paying U.S. jobs, build new U.S. supplied infrastructure,
and alleviate the trade deficit. And one key point here was the idea of U.S. applied infrastructure.
When the outgoing Biden administration established the diffusion rule, there was an explicit
assumption that the U.S. would be the monopoly supplier of advanced AI chips.
Tier 2 nations could import sufficient chips to build large-scale data centers, but only with
approval from the Commerce Department.
The same approach was applied to the most advanced AI models, which potentially limited global
developments via cloud services.
Of course, what blew up these assumptions was the release of Deepseek R1.
Before that, the belief was widespread that Chinese chip foundries were still several years
behind in Midia's current products, but that appears pretty clearly to be no longer the
case.
Chinese open source models from Deepseek and Alibaba's Quen team are catching up quickly to
the state-of-the-art. And more to the point, they're now at a place where they represent a viable
alternative to models like OpenAIs GBT40. These models are easily good enough to power basic
AI functionality across the global south, and China has expressed a desire to export them far and wide.
Chips are a similar story. Even if Huawei isn't on par with Nvidia and doesn't have production
ramped up, it's only a matter of time, and it's now more likely to be measured in months rather than
years. What we don't know at this stage is what the replacement for the diffusion rule will look
like. There's been discussion of the administration folding chip policy into their broader
trade negotiations using access as a bargaining chip. One region of particular interest is the Middle
East. States like Saudi Arabia and the UAE have been racing to develop advanced AI capabilities, but
were stymied by the Biden administration. There were concerns that chips destined for the
Middle East would be passed on to China. On Wednesday, when queried about loosening restrictions
on the Gulf states, Trump responded, we might be doing that. Yeah, it will be announced soon.
Now, Trump himself is currently preparing for his first major diplomatic trip, which includes a three-country Middle East leg beginning in Saudi Arabia.
The Gulf states, of course, sit between China and the U.S. both geographically and diplomatically.
And if Trump strikes a deal, we could be about to witness the first example of chip diplomacy in the AI era.
Now, the other big question is how the U.S. will flood the world with its AI to get in ahead of China.
Right again, there was two parts of the diffusion rule.
One was preventing diffusion of AI chips to China, but the other was diffusing American.
American AI technology to friendly countries around the world. Well, to that end, OpenAI just announced
a new initiative called AI for countries. The company wrote that following the announcement of their
Stargate project, quote, we've heard from many countries asking for help in building out similar
AI infrastructure, that they want their own Stargates and similar projects. It's clear to everyone now
that this kind of infrastructure is going to be the backbone of future economic growth and national
development. Under the initiative, OpenAI will partner with governments to build out data
centers in a series of co-funded projects. They said that the goal is to pursue 10 international
projects to start with, but they didn't say anything about where they'll be located.
At the same time, the announcement blog post did carry extremely heavy overtones that this
initiative is squarely aimed at out-competing Chinese AI deployment. OpenAI wrote,
We want to help these countries and in the process spread democratic AI, which means the development,
use, and deployment of AI that protects and incorporates long-standing democratic principles.
We believe that partnering closely with the U.S. government is the best way to advance
democratic AI. So there are lots of interesting elements of this story. How much of this is just
Nvidia putting its thumb on the scale of the U.S. administration and having them respond. How much of this
is about larger trade negotiations? Whatever the answer, AI's place in geopolitics continues to do nothing
but increase. For now that that is going to do it for today's AI Daily Brief. Appreciate you listening
or watching as always. And until next time, peace.
