The Future of Search Engines: OpenAI's SearchGPT

Published On Fri Jul 26 2024
The Future of Search Engines: OpenAI's SearchGPT

Google faces a new threat from OpenAI

For years, companies have developed search engines after search engines, vowing their products would topple Google's dominance. With little success. Google, owned by Alphabet (GOOGL), remains the dominant player in search with a 91% share. One reason for its dominance: It's embedded in the software of just about all smartphones. But a new player is starting to develop its own search engine: OpenAI. Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images

The Rise of OpenAI and SearchGPT

The AI-darling behind ChatGPT announced Thursday that it's testing SearchGPT, which is described as "a temporary prototype." OpenAI, the Silicon Valley startup worth $80 billion or more, has been one of the leaders in artificial intelligence development. It is best known for its ChatGPT application, the chatbot and virtual assistant that has more than 100 million users.

Some investors see the idea as having a shot. Alphabet shares slid 3.1% to $167.28 on July 25, its lowest close since May 3. The shares are down about 12.8% from Alphabet's 52-week high of $191.75, reached on July 10. They're also down 8.2% in July.

The Future of SearchGPT

OpenAI's news also gutted a rebound in big tech stocks. What OpenAI hopes to do with SearchGPT is design and create new search features that will "combine the strength of our AI models with information from the web to give you fast and timely answers with clear and relevant sources." The prototype will provide data Open AI will use to "integrate the best of these features directly into ChatGPT in the future."

Google Gemini vs Azure OpenAI GPT

The first step, the company said, is to launch the application "to a small group of users and publishers to get feedback." Among companies involved are The Atlantic and News Corp. (NWSA), the parent of The Wall Street Journal. Individuals can sign up to a waitlist of users who will test the tool. There are others working on similar applications such as Perplexity. Perplexity is backed by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos and Nvidia (NVDA).

Market Impact and Competition

Alphabet's slump helped stall a relief rally for the Nasdaq Composite Index, which saw a 202-point rally sink to a 161-point loss to 17,181.72. The Nasdaq-100 was off 1.1% to 18,830.58. The Standard & Poor's 500 was off 0.5% to 5,399.22. The Dow Jones industrials were up 0.2% to 39,935. But the index had risen to as high as 40,438 early in the session. Microsoft (MSFT) shares fell 2.5% to $418.40. Microsoft would be a competitor with its Bing search engine. However, Microsoft owns 49% of OpenAi's equity and has invested $13.3 billion in the organization. In all, six of the Mag 7 stocks, including Alphabet and Microsoft, dropped on Thursday. Electric vehicle maker Tesla (TSLA) closed up 2% to $220.25.