Agreed he's a great CEO and role model. I want to be like him but to my kids (that would be a great achievement even if in so much smaller scale lmao!)
That was one of the best interviews I've seen in a long time! I've spent a decade in a newsroom next to award-winning reporters and have heard many questions being asked. Nilay did a fantastic job of bringing up the difficult topics without hesitation (but with respect and perspective) and frankly Satya was receptive to the questions and responded openly and clearly. I came away with a lot of respect for both of these men.
I agree it was an excellent interview, that being said I thought Nadella was evasive when pressed around the impact that improved search answers will have on publishers who ultimately provide the information that underpins Bings answers. My take is as the quality increases publishers traffic will fall & as Nilay says this changes the value exchange significantly.
Best interview I saw with Satya so far, other interviews have been too short or shallow with their questions. This one really drills down into some detail
@@LuisManuelLealDias Apple has kept real quiet on App Store regulations until the idea of them was brought to the table. Same with Google and Meta/Facebook with harvesting and selling people's data to push ads into ever corner of the internet. Same with NFTbros when crypto and non-fungible tokens were all the rage in 2021.
Microsoft's CEO is being diplomatic here, but once the user experience of querying the model is seen as vastly superior to searching for answers on random websites, it's unlikely that people will still want to do that. There'll be a complete paradigm shift, and many categories of websites and their business model won't make sense anymore
@@gabrielmoro3d I doubt that will happen, until there's no way to detect something is written by AI, then great writers will still be able to use that tool better than anyone else.
as he said there's gonna be some search buttons like 'where does this answer come from' but the thing is nobody actually knows how the product is gonna be used by us. only time will tell and in a year, it'll be clear. then only one can be sure of it. let's just keep an eye on it for now.
Issues with the video quality have now been resolved! Apologies that it happened in the first place, but a big thank you for all your patience. 🙌 - Vjeran
I remember Satya's talks as a freshly minted CEO of Microsoft about a future where we could access all our content across screens and operating systems - a platform-agnostic future. It was a prescient vision, and we are now living in that future. I get the same feeling of seeing the future from his talk here. I look forward to welcoming our co-pilot agent overlords.
This was a great interview all around. Tough but fair questions, engaging discussion and great responses from Satya. Well done Nilay and The Verge team!
@@oldbot64 Look at where that got them. Managers like Tim and Satya got the best returns and bets.Technocrats like Sundar and Mark got the short end of the stick with almost all of their bets failing.
Great interview Nilay! I also admired the straightforward answers that Satya gave - not something we see in action with many tech CEO’s these days. I think MS is on to this as a winner…
I've already been using Bing as my default for about a couple years now, since I switched to Edge. The design of the search results are actually more helpful than Google already imo.
Excellent questions. I have watched several of Satya’s interview and this has by far been the best interview with insightful questions. Well done Nilay!
Wow! What a powerful interview. Much respect to both of these men. Makes me wonder if this new Bing Chat can potentially wipe out the need for front end websites. Seems like the Bing Chat interface can potentially be that front end for everything as it's pulling in all the relevant content from else where. It's as if Bing Chat is generating a custom front end with exactly what you want, dynamically in your face. I think it's going to even pull in pictures, likely maps and other visuals I assume. Can this change the way we make or think about websites, can a site just be pure JSON data or some other structured API instead for those that just need to get information out there and not technically have a flashy website?
I strongly disagree, mainly because google tried that already with Amp and it resulted in websites looosing tonnes of revenue from ads. What we need is what he's advocating for, a benevolent AI that actually tells you where it got its information from, and how to know more. Its great because it drives traffic to those websites which generate revenue
That was an astonishing interview by the Verge team, as Satya was talking i was reflecting on his books. He certainly is a person who does what he says he is going to do….translating poetry as a first prompt haha brilliant!
Nice interview! You really dug in with incisive questioning and followups that seemed to cut through any well rehearsed PR answers. Refreshing to hear. Satya did a great job too imo
Exactly. I've been watching this for years. I can't wait to see how it rolls out. I was an early Google user, but I believe their approach has gone stale. I look forward to what Open AI will do for Bing. It should be quite a show.
Nilay stole the show. This is the first time I was more interested on the questions than Satya’s answers. And it is not easy to take the attention aways away from a charismatic leader like Satya. Thanks so much for the great interview.
I loved the interview and it was interesting to see the fear that this is causing not only to Google but people like you the verge that profit from ads. As he said let’s dance 🔥
Hard to believe that Google hasn't been working on something like this? Still not easy to take market share from such a dominant business, but Kodak no longer dominates the photography sector, because they didn't innovate fast enough, so it can happen.
@@sharpvidtube I agree, this feels like a Kodak/Digital Camera & Blackberry/Touchscreen moment. Both of those companies already had the technology (that ultimately disrupted their business model) years ahead of their competition. Kodak had the first digital camera back in the 70's! Yet, they both sat on the tech and played defence, refusing to get out ahead of their competition. Google has had the AI chatbot tech for years (even started demonstrating it a few years back). But they are so reliant on their ads revenue, they didn't integrate it until Bing forced their hand.
@@abhisheka3 Kodak were huge at one time, not many businesses stay dominant for as long as Google. I know it's unlikely they will lose to Microsoft, but it can't be ruled out
@@sharpvidtube it can be ruled out. The examples you gave, the incumbent companies were rejecting the new tech at worst and being slow to adapt at best. Google is the opposite, much of the AI work is due to Google's advancements in AI/ML work. Plus Google is already a leader in the next gen tech + they have already announced Bard the same week as MS announcing theirs
Microsoft has HUGE advantage here: As advertising is not their "core" business with little or no financial incentives, they can afford to go ALL OUT. Google, OTOH, has to thread very carefully as 60% of its business derives from advertising. This is the proverbial kid who goes ALL out with nothing to lose against a seasoned pro and actually wins the game~
I’m halfway through this interview. These questions weren’t softball ones. But something feels ‘off’ with Satya. Like a lot more energy than usual and his answers are next level in thinking, response time and details. Almost as if his brain is moving at 130%
alright this is going to be huge. number one question is: how do websites who monetize traffic through ad revenue continue to make money / survive if this thing is scrubbing the data upfront
The thumbnail could have been better. An amazing professional interview gets superseded by the impression of "someone must have put Satya's face over some random commentary."
Someone noticed! Heck, people are praising his answers but he's super good at dodging the super key questions at hand here. I'm super curious with the IP and monetization bit that's not really answered.
Good interview. It sounded like MS have decided to push through with the chat version of Bing until some publisher(s) take them to court over it. I can't remotely see how it is going to increase traffic to publishers when users get all the answers within the chat itself. My guess is, MS will have to come up with some sort of a partner program like Adsense that will reward blogs/websites with revenue share whenever their websites are shown in the reference of each Chat response. So I think this will be the beginning of the end for small publishers, and SEO is about to change wildly. Google, from their "leaked" screenshots also seems to be doing something similar. However, in the long-term, rewarding publishers generously is going to be something that these companies will have to do, because as Nilay mentioned, the responses will get watered down over time. But I can't see this happening for a long time, so it's time for small publishers to buckle up.
The thing is people aren’t actually seen the big picture. Yes you can get the answers in the chat, but if I’m going to search for the cheapest best computer monitor, I’m going to be like where is this thing finding such a cheap monitor and then I will click on the link and that would drive traffic.
The interviewer is great man! Nilay you did a great job, lucky for company like Verge have you, you are quite valuable. Also, I now can understand why Satya Nadella is the only genius guy in the silicon valley with great risks appetite and yet great in creating businesses with fair share of market competition, he is bringing the next age of cloud computing without anyone noticing an inch of it.
The question at 8:15 re regulatory risks was brilliant. Microsoft, despite being a behemoth, is a minnow in search. So it can take risks that Google cannot and clearly Satya is aware of this fact and will fully take advantage of this. His laugh was very telling!!
Good interview with the time you had. If I were that guy, I would have called it Bing+, just to indicate to people that something is fundamentally different about how Bing searches. I also liked how you questioned him about how to deal with fair use. I think his answers were a bit vague about how the engine would compensate the content's authors. This is going to be critical. In addition, I would love to find out how authors can train AI and monetize it. I think how it should work is the author should generate content the way they always have. They then go to their bring account and specify where their data lies. Once the AI engine picks up the content and starts using it in their prompting answers then you get compensated by bing and/or advertisers. Advertisers should be able to sponsor the content by showing related sponsored imagery or a small phrase. So for example, I prompt: Is chocolate bad for dogs? AI answers, In large quantities, it can be harmful, and you should call your vet right away. In the corner of that answer, it should show you an ad that is for dog food and it shows a picture of a bag of dog food.
@@sobreinquisidor Exactly, although corporation are greedy to make money for their shareholders, in this case the AI is using creator content to monetize so if they want to avoid backlash they better share the pie.
Great interview! I'm still wondering about the monetization model though, is Bing going to give answers from sites that paid to be there? It's not like a search webpage where you can see multiple links at once, it's going to give answers generated from specific sources. I hope the info it gives aren't full of advertisements 😅
Everyone reading this, i need your opinion. I'm a writer and I've been writing for brands. I wrote blogs, articles, and what not. Now, my work is directly at target as most clients using ai to write whatever they want. My thought is, if most people started producing content this way, then ai will have a hard time ranking the right links. 2. Ai won't be denting into this whole adsense system as people will start finding ai generated answers boring and always changing. If you search top 10 TV in market, it will always show the same result for a very long time and people will end up buying wrong product resulting in shift from bing to google again. 3. Even though this ai is smart and it needs data and if it is collecting data everyday and ranking products based on customers review factor, it can be manipulated by uploading thousands of articles with faulty information. This comment is just on my assumption. I want the verge to talk about it in detail
Microsoft have a massive opportunity here to take on Google. Some of the examples I’ve seen of what ChatGPT can do has blown me away. This will be a game changer.
The fact that Microsoft and other IT companies starting to invest on AIs will become a huge part for starting AI companis like Bluewillow. Lot of potential here for business.
I felt like I was on the “verge” of the beginning of a new race , AI. Google has got some deep issues . Happy to see Microsoft back on the world tech stage , on the front foot
Great questions from this interviewer. Many people would be afraid to ask tough questions. I felt like the answers were spot on as well. Good job guys.
OpenAI and Microsoft may have just openned the pandora box. They force Google to release a version of LaMDA to the public. And, we may end up with Skynet.
Seriously the way Satya answers those questions with such passion, positivity, and intelligence ... it's honestly inspiring.
Agreed he's a great CEO and role model. I want to be like him but to my kids (that would be a great achievement even if in so much smaller scale lmao!)
He looks so excited about this new technology, the competition and new opportunities. So am I!
Ballicker much eh
I think a chat bot will be able to give answears as good as tvis or even better in the near future. Some of Chat GPTs answears are already gold.
@@VR_Wizard I use it for work everyday . I'd pay for it if I had to
That was one of the best interviews I've seen in a long time! I've spent a decade in a newsroom next to award-winning reporters and have heard many questions being asked. Nilay did a fantastic job of bringing up the difficult topics without hesitation (but with respect and perspective) and frankly Satya was receptive to the questions and responded openly and clearly. I came away with a lot of respect for both of these men.
I agree it was an excellent interview, that being said I thought Nadella was evasive when pressed around the impact that improved search answers will have on publishers who ultimately provide the information that underpins Bings answers. My take is as the quality increases publishers traffic will fall & as Nilay says this changes the value exchange significantly.
This was a great interview. Tough questions, but presented fairly. I’d love to see more of these.
Listen to Decoder!
I agree. The questions about people not clicking the actual articles was essential. And I love how he insisted on it to prove his point.
It's clear that Satya appreciated it too. There was pushback both ways, but always with mutual respect. This is excellent journalism.
There are already a bunch of decoder podcast episodes. For anyone looking for some good interviews.
Best interview I saw with Satya so far, other interviews have been too short or shallow with their questions. This one really drills down into some detail
One of the best tech interviews ever! Great job Nilay
This is a pretty damn good example of a textbook interview. This was such a great discussion.
Great interviewer! Asked tough questions and brought up big concerns. Great job 🤖
This was a fantastic interview! Amazed to hear Satya say that this shift needs to have some regulation around it. A refreshing take from a tech CEO
They always say this sort of stuff
@@LuisManuelLealDias Apple has kept real quiet on App Store regulations until the idea of them was brought to the table. Same with Google and Meta/Facebook with harvesting and selling people's data to push ads into ever corner of the internet. Same with NFTbros when crypto and non-fungible tokens were all the rage in 2021.
Don't be fooled, they say these things to be seen as harmless to regulators.
Microsoft's CEO is being diplomatic here, but once the user experience of querying the model is seen as vastly superior to searching for answers on random websites, it's unlikely that people will still want to do that.
There'll be a complete paradigm shift, and many categories of websites and their business model won't make sense anymore
Written content by humans is going to take a huge toll.
@@gabrielmoro3d I don't think it's going to challenge the creativity of great human writers anytime soon.
@@gabrielmoro3d I doubt that will happen, until there's no way to detect something is written by AI, then great writers will still be able to use that tool better than anyone else.
as he said there's gonna be some search buttons like 'where does this answer come from' but the thing is nobody actually knows how the product is gonna be used by us. only time will tell and in a year, it'll be clear. then only one can be sure of it. let's just keep an eye on it for now.
Fair enough. Too many websites are just out there to collect Ad revenue w/o real value. Good to see them go.
Thank you so much, the verge! For bringing up Satya in the interview. Definitely not easy.
Issues with the video quality have now been resolved! Apologies that it happened in the first place, but a big thank you for all your patience. 🙌
- Vjeran
Oprošteno, Vjerane:)
really surprised at the quality of this interview , Verge is doing great work with their amazing people, please more of this!
I remember Satya's talks as a freshly minted CEO of Microsoft about a future where we could access all our content across screens and operating systems - a platform-agnostic future. It was a prescient vision, and we are now living in that future. I get the same feeling of seeing the future from his talk here. I look forward to welcoming our co-pilot agent overlords.
If only I'd been smart enough to invest in Microsoft back then.
Never too late to invest now😂. Imagine Bing gets even 10/20% market share of search, Microsoft's value would grow a lot.
Awesome interview!! Love his acknowledgement of Microsoft's infamous past branding issues 😂
Satya is very very confident about his new product.... 👍
This was a great interview all around. Tough but fair questions, engaging discussion and great responses from Satya. Well done Nilay and The Verge team!
Great interview! Really felt you were asking questions that were thought provoking and were asked with research done behind
Of all the tech CEO’s he’s the one I’d want to most sit down and have a chat with.
I'd most want to*
The CEOs that come from a tech background generally are much more interesting than their business counterparts
@@oldbot64 Look at where that got them. Managers like Tim and Satya got the best returns and bets.Technocrats like Sundar and Mark got the short end of the stick with almost all of their bets failing.
Satya's answer to questions are so verbose and free flowing.. As if they are coming straight out of chat GPT.
Great interview Nilay! I also admired the straightforward answers that Satya gave - not something we see in action with many tech CEO’s these days. I think MS is on to this as a winner…
I've already been using Bing as my default for about a couple years now, since I switched to Edge. The design of the search results are actually more helpful than Google already imo.
Satya can really answer great questions with ease. Wow what a leader
You can tell he's passionate and knowledgeable about it.
Excellent questions. I have watched several of Satya’s interview and this has by far been the best interview with insightful questions. Well done Nilay!
Incredible. Clicked on this out of curiosity and ended up watching the entire interview. Great work!
You asked some really hard-hitting questions, this was an awesome interview!
Wow! What a powerful interview. Much respect to both of these men. Makes me wonder if this new Bing Chat can potentially wipe out the need for front end websites. Seems like the Bing Chat interface can potentially be that front end for everything as it's pulling in all the relevant content from else where. It's as if Bing Chat is generating a custom front end with exactly what you want, dynamically in your face. I think it's going to even pull in pictures, likely maps and other visuals I assume. Can this change the way we make or think about websites, can a site just be pure JSON data or some other structured API instead for those that just need to get information out there and not technically have a flashy website?
I strongly disagree, mainly because google tried that already with Amp and it resulted in websites looosing tonnes of revenue from ads. What we need is what he's advocating for, a benevolent AI that actually tells you where it got its information from, and how to know more. Its great because it drives traffic to those websites which generate revenue
What a really really great interview by Nilay with awesome answers by Satya. Super exciting stuff!
A great interview. Kudos to Nilay and the team
This was an incredible interview. Your questions were great. I loved all the answers too. The lighting and camera work was top notch.
That was an astonishing interview by the Verge team, as Satya was talking i was reflecting on his books. He certainly is a person who does what he says he is going to do….translating poetry as a first prompt haha brilliant!
very comprehensive interview ! I loved the statement "Google will show they can dance and we are the people who made them dance" !
Nice interview! You really dug in with incisive questioning and followups that seemed to cut through any well rehearsed PR answers. Refreshing to hear. Satya did a great job too imo
Wow! Satya is fantastic, so concise and well spoken
Wow, great interview. Looking forward to increased competition in the search space.
Exactly. I've been watching this for years. I can't wait to see how it rolls out. I was an early Google user, but I believe their approach has gone stale. I look forward to what Open AI will do for Bing. It should be quite a show.
This is like our best thumbnail ever
Yuuup... it's up there!
Is the verge a good place for conservatives to come and work?
Honestly, mind blowing lol
Nilay stole the show. This is the first time I was more interested on the questions than Satya’s answers. And it is not easy to take the attention aways away from a charismatic leader like Satya. Thanks so much for the great interview.
What an interview!! Satya is so passionate about MS. Great at answering really tough questions. Inspiring leadership indeed.
I loved the interview and it was interesting to see the fear that this is causing not only to Google but people like you the verge that profit from ads. As he said let’s dance 🔥
Hard to believe that Google hasn't been working on something like this? Still not easy to take market share from such a dominant business, but Kodak no longer dominates the photography sector, because they didn't innovate fast enough, so it can happen.
@@sharpvidtube I agree, this feels like a Kodak/Digital Camera & Blackberry/Touchscreen moment. Both of those companies already had the technology (that ultimately disrupted their business model) years ahead of their competition. Kodak had the first digital camera back in the 70's! Yet, they both sat on the tech and played defence, refusing to get out ahead of their competition. Google has had the AI chatbot tech for years (even started demonstrating it a few years back). But they are so reliant on their ads revenue, they didn't integrate it until Bing forced their hand.
@@sharpvidtube Google is not Kodak. They still are the leaders in ML and they have already announced Bard
@@abhisheka3 Kodak were huge at one time, not many businesses stay dominant for as long as Google. I know it's unlikely they will lose to Microsoft, but it can't be ruled out
@@sharpvidtube it can be ruled out. The examples you gave, the incumbent companies were rejecting the new tech at worst and being slow to adapt at best.
Google is the opposite, much of the AI work is due to Google's advancements in AI/ML work. Plus Google is already a leader in the next gen tech + they have already announced Bard the same week as MS announcing theirs
This is a really quality interviewer asking insightful questions and letting Satya answer. Very well done!
Great interview. Satya is so smart. Of course they kept the Bing name Because It's Not Google
Microsoft has HUGE advantage here: As advertising is not their "core" business with little or no financial incentives, they can afford to go ALL OUT. Google, OTOH, has to thread very carefully as 60% of its business derives from advertising. This is the proverbial kid who goes ALL out with nothing to lose against a seasoned pro and actually wins the game~
Enjoyed every second! Rarely I see interviews this well balanced.
Now I became fan of Mr Satya, Awesome interview
Finally, some more images from the event and a great interview.
Thank you for watching! We got more coming out tomorrow!
What an interview! 20 years from now, people will tune back to this to hear how MSFT increased their search share..!
The thumbnail rocks! Did you use a 360 cam to film this interview?
Awesome interview. Loved to hear his outlook on the future. Specifically his thoughts on Bing
Congrats Nilay, awesome interview!
thank you!
That was a very good tech interview with plenty of well-asked tough questions. Good job!
I’m halfway through this interview. These questions weren’t softball ones.
But something feels ‘off’ with Satya. Like a lot more energy than usual and his answers are next level in thinking, response time and details.
Almost as if his brain is moving at 130%
TRT replacement therapy?
He obviously has a lot of passion for this project.
Such a great interview! Great questions, great answers and a CEO who actually has a plan.
Super good interview, he could have easily did a victory dance on Google instead he was humble and thoughtful
alright this is going to be huge. number one question is: how do websites who monetize traffic through ad revenue continue to make money / survive if this thing is scrubbing the data upfront
That seems to be one of the reasons why Google has a tougher decision to make, do they damage current GDN revenue in the hope of winning in the future
Maybe they don't? Maybe it will force them to move to a subscription model?
The thumbnail could have been better. An amazing professional interview gets superseded by the impression of "someone must have put Satya's face over some random commentary."
Actually good interview. Well done Verge
0:06 Damn. Nilay is sitting on the whole damn Microsoft Campus lol
Hi, Brandon! 👋
@@TheVerge Hey 👋😊
One of the best tech interview , i watched recently . Interesting questions and and smart answers.would like to see more to come from you Nilay
👆👆 Thanks for watching.. hit the above username on Telegram I have a surprise for you 🎁🎁🎁
It feels like it's been a while since i've seen such good questions. Satya's answers were mostly very good at answering them too
Satya's answers are much better than most tech personalities
Nadella is truly adept at evading the questions asked.
Someone noticed! Heck, people are praising his answers but he's super good at dodging the super key questions at hand here.
I'm super curious with the IP and monetization bit that's not really answered.
He's just another MS scoundrel, but The Verge and its subscribers are largely MS simps, so
Good interview. It sounded like MS have decided to push through with the chat version of Bing until some publisher(s) take them to court over it. I can't remotely see how it is going to increase traffic to publishers when users get all the answers within the chat itself. My guess is, MS will have to come up with some sort of a partner program like Adsense that will reward blogs/websites with revenue share whenever their websites are shown in the reference of each Chat response.
So I think this will be the beginning of the end for small publishers, and SEO is about to change wildly. Google, from their "leaked" screenshots also seems to be doing something similar. However, in the long-term, rewarding publishers generously is going to be something that these companies will have to do, because as Nilay mentioned, the responses will get watered down over time. But I can't see this happening for a long time, so it's time for small publishers to buckle up.
The thing is people aren’t actually seen the big picture. Yes you can get the answers in the chat, but if I’m going to search for the cheapest best computer monitor, I’m going to be like where is this thing finding such a cheap monitor and then I will click on the link and that would drive traffic.
@@m3ntalgod224 you mean you wouldn’t first go to Amazon or bestbuy?
What a fantastic interview. Nilay asks some great questions, but Satya absolutely impresses with his very insightful and though provoking responses!
Wow Nilay. This is one of the best tech interviews of all time. Really. Than you.
Well this was a pleasant surprise
Damn I wish this interview was like an hour long. Its a really good interview.
Such a terrific interview. Nilay and the verge just made my day.
This was fantastic and fearless. Great interviewing skills.
Loved how he answered the brand question at end.
The interviewer is great man! Nilay you did a great job, lucky for company like Verge have you, you are quite valuable. Also, I now can understand why Satya Nadella is the only genius guy in the silicon valley with great risks appetite and yet great in creating businesses with fair share of market competition, he is bringing the next age of cloud computing without anyone noticing an inch of it.
Everybody in the chat calls this a interview. Nilay: no no its a podcast.
Satya's a very likable person. Good guy vibes.
The question at 8:15 re regulatory risks was brilliant. Microsoft, despite being a behemoth, is a minnow in search. So it can take risks that Google cannot and clearly Satya is aware of this fact and will fully take advantage of this. His laugh was very telling!!
Really appreciate the last question. I do question some of the branding and product decision they make sometimes. Great interview.
Great interview! It would be interesting to see how this area evolves. Also, props to whoever created the thumbnail 😂
Great interview. Can’t wait to Bing it! Thanks for your good work, Nilay.
thanks for properly taking over Dieter
Good interview with the time you had. If I were that guy, I would have called it Bing+, just to indicate to people that something is fundamentally different about how Bing searches. I also liked how you questioned him about how to deal with fair use. I think his answers were a bit vague about how the engine would compensate the content's authors. This is going to be critical. In addition, I would love to find out how authors can train AI and monetize it. I think how it should work is the author should generate content the way they always have. They then go to their bring account and specify where their data lies. Once the AI engine picks up the content and starts using it in their prompting answers then you get compensated by bing and/or advertisers. Advertisers should be able to sponsor the content by showing related sponsored imagery or a small phrase. So for example, I prompt: Is chocolate bad for dogs? AI answers, In large quantities, it can be harmful, and you should call your vet right away. In the corner of that answer, it should show you an ad that is for dog food and it shows a picture of a bag of dog food.
That is a good idea. Essentially if the content you create makes the user click an add then you get your share
@@sobreinquisidor Exactly, although corporation are greedy to make money for their shareholders, in this case the AI is using creator content to monetize so if they want to avoid backlash they better share the pie.
Great interview! I'm still wondering about the monetization model though, is Bing going to give answers from sites that paid to be there? It's not like a search webpage where you can see multiple links at once, it's going to give answers generated from specific sources. I hope the info it gives aren't full of advertisements 😅
This ... SEO optimized answers lol
Great interview with great questions and great replies from Satya.
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Everyone reading this, i need your opinion.
I'm a writer and I've been writing for brands. I wrote blogs, articles, and what not. Now, my work is directly at target as most clients using ai to write whatever they want.
My thought is, if most people started producing content this way, then ai will have a hard time ranking the right links.
2. Ai won't be denting into this whole adsense system as people will start finding ai generated answers boring and always changing. If you search top 10 TV in market, it will always show the same result for a very long time and people will end up buying wrong product resulting in shift from bing to google again.
3. Even though this ai is smart and it needs data and if it is collecting data everyday and ranking products based on customers review factor, it can be manipulated by uploading thousands of articles with faulty information.
This comment is just on my assumption. I want the verge to talk about it in detail
Microsoft have a massive opportunity here to take on Google. Some of the examples I’ve seen of what ChatGPT can do has blown me away. This will be a game changer.
Nilay, good for you. This was a very good interview
The fact that Microsoft and other IT companies starting to invest on AIs will become a huge part for starting AI companis like Bluewillow. Lot of potential here for business.
I felt like I was on the “verge” of the beginning of a new race , AI. Google has got some deep issues . Happy to see Microsoft back on the world tech stage , on the front foot
Love the questions the host asks great work!
Nilay’s intelligence and wit is the only thing that’s keeping me as a Verge reader and listener. Oh, and Alex Heath!
Wow, that was such a great interview. The questions were very relevant to the impact of the new Bing and Edge capabilities powered by AI
Nilay, great interview - thanks a lot for that. Nilay, you did a great job :-)
Great questions from this interviewer. Many people would be afraid to ask tough questions. I felt like the answers were spot on as well. Good job guys.
"'Brands can be rebuilt as long as there's innovation'' is a great quote. Just look at Apple from the late '90s onwards!
Awesome Interview! IMO the best tech interview in a long time.
Great interview. Was engaging throughout. Excellent questions and answers throughout!
Fantastic interview! Both classy guys
You know The Verge is bringing out the big guns when they send Nilay basically anywhere - what a great interview!
👆👆 Thanks for watching.. hit the above username on Telegram I have a surprise for you 🎁🎁🎁.
The guy is way cooler than Elon will ever be. Class all over
Good interview and interviewer
Product experience wise Microsoft is behind Google so it's hard to pull out something like this
This was a very enlightening interview 💐
OpenAI and Microsoft may have just openned the pandora box. They force Google to release a version of LaMDA to the public. And, we may end up with Skynet.
About time tbh lots of great projects behind closed doors to experiment with.
What a brilliant interview, great questioning on some really potent issues - top top content
This tempts me to switch back to Edge on my main laptop from my tried and true Vivaldi Browser.