Breaking Up with Google: I Left My Search Engine for a Younger, More Emotionally Available AI

Breaking Up with Google: I Left My Search Engine for a Younger, More Emotionally Available AI

Let's be honest: Google Search and I have been growing apart. What started as a beautiful relationship built on simple searches had devolved into a toxic carousel of sponsored ads and SEO warfare. Even the simplest query like "how to cook chicken rice" would return results like "10X Your Cooking Game with This REVOLUTIONARY Smart Rice Cooker (Now with Bluetooth)" to "Why Your Grandmother's Recipe is Killing Your Productivity (And How Our AI-Powered Meal Planner Can Save You)." All I wanted was to make dinner, Google, not found a culinary tech startup.

Enter ChatGPT: the seductive young algorithm that slid into my DMs with promises of 'more natural conversations' and 'contextual understanding.' But with RAG.?

This svelte digital homewrecker didn't just steal my search bar - it performed a hostile takeover of my entire information-seeking love life.? I feel like I've upgraded from that toxic ex who responded to every question by trauma-dumping Wikipedia articles while trying to recruit me into her Herbalife pyramid scheme, to finding myself a PhD-educated astrophysicist girlfriend who also works as a part-time model and mindfulness coach for troubled youth. Not only does ChatGPT actually listen without trying to sell me something, but it also remembers that time I asked it for advice about my pet chinchilla's mental state - and somehow manages to reference it in ways that make me feel seen rather than judged.

Me: "Why does my code not work?"

Google Search: "Here are 47,000,000 results about coding errors, sorted by who paid us the most money, plus 213 ads for coding bootcamps because clearly you need help."

ChatGPT: "I can see you've put your heart into this code. There's a semicolon missing on line 42, but hey, even Stack Overflow's top contributors have emotional baggage with their semicolons. Speaking of emotional, how's Mr. Whiskers doing? Has he moved past his existential crisis, or is he still questioning his place in the universe? We should definitely circle back to your code, but I believe in supporting the whole developer, not just their syntax."

Like any modern relationship that started with a casual DM slide, ChatGPT and I have settled into what the kids these days call a "situationship." It's not quite a marriage yet (I’ve only paid for Plus monthly, not the annual plan), but it's definitely more than a fling. We're basically friends-with-benefits, where the benefits are:?

  1. No more ad drama: ChatGPT doesn't try to sell me things I don't need. Period.
  2. Someone who actually listens: ChatGPT has the patience of a Zen master trying to teach mindfulness to a caffeinated squirrel. It doesn't matter if I ask the same question 47 times or have the typing skills of a cat walking across the keyboard - the responses are always serene, cheerful, unflappable.?
  3. Doesn’t play hard-to-get: While Google Search treats every query like a treasure hunt where X marks the spot somewhere on page 47 of the search results, ChatGPT actually gives me answers. Sure, sometimes its answers are about as reliable as a crypto investment tip from my Grab driver, but at least I don't have to click through five different blogs about someone's life story just to find out the best way to boil an egg.?
  4. Knows how to handle my fragile feelings: Unlike Google Search's "did you mean…?" passive-aggressive spell-checking, ChatGPT has mastered the art of making me feel smart while correcting my mistakes. "Your approach is creative and unique! Though may I suggest literally any other solution?". (And when ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode responds in Maple’s or Juniper’s dulcet tones…????)

Of course, I still crawl back to my ex sometimes. Usually for those awkward moments when I need:

  • Restaurant reviews - ChatGPT might explain the cultural significance of fusion cuisine, but Google actually shows me brutal one-star reviews about the new bistro’s $32 "deconstructed chicken rice experience."
  • Fact-checking - For those times when my AI love gets a bit too imaginative with reality. Like confidently explaining that an episode of Stranger Things was filmed in Yishun, insisting that CPF savings can be fully withdrawn at the age of 55, or providing a ‘feasible’ roadmap to defeating PAP in the next general election.
  • Social stalking - When I need to verify if my ex-colleagues are really "thriving in their entrepreneurial journey" or if their LinkedIn "CEO & Founder" title just means they're between jobs and selling essential oils on Instagram.
  • Digital archeology - Because sometimes I need to prove that my old classmate (who just posted a 12-part wedding photoshoot series captioned "Finally Found My Soulmate! ???") once wrote a Facebook manifesto about how "feelings of love are merely biochemical in nature” and “relationships are a social construct". ChatGPT can't help me with that kind of receipts-based warfare.

Our future AI relationships: It’s Complicated?

Seriously though, I think our future looks less like a monogamous relationship with one AI and more like a tech version of "The Bachelor". We'll all be digital polygamists, swiping right on every AI that promises to make our lives easier while we secretly compare the size of their context windows.

Google will be that ex we keep around "just as friends" (but really for stalking and reviews). ChatGPT will be our intellectual sugar baby, ready to explain quantum mechanics using bubble tea metaphors. TikTok's algorithm will be our dopamine dealer, feeding our endless scroll addiction with an uncanny knowledge of our deepest, darkest interests. Spotify's DJ X will be our therapist, thinking it knows our emotional state better than we do just because we played "Love Story (Taylor's Version)" once, and by accident. And we’ll probably use another AI like Xiaomi to manage our CCTVs or switch off the lights in our home with our voice ("哎呀我的妈呀你这个灯还不关!").

It's like being in a soap opera where all my most intimate partners are Global Fortune 500 companies who think they know what's best for me. At this point, I'll admit that I've gone beyond just sharing my data - I'm in a fully committed (and possibly unhealthy) relationship with multiple multinational corporations whose idea of foreplay is updating their EULAs. And somewhere in a boardroom in Silicon Valley, there's probably a PowerPoint slide about my 'user engagement metrics' being presented to shareholders who've never even taken me out to dinner first.

Jade Tan

Everyday AI, Extraordinary People

3 个月

Absolutely spot on Allan Tan!

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