For 26 years, Google’s core bargain with the internet has been the same: type a query into a white search box, get a page of blue links, click through to the web, and repeat. That model shaped the attention economy, built the SEO industry, and funded much of the open web. At Google I/O 2026, however, the company signaled that it wants to replace that contract with something centered on AI.
The article frames this as the end of the traditional search engine era. Google is no longer presenting search as a simple gateway to websites, but as an AI-mediated layer that can answer, synthesize, and increasingly act on behalf of the user. In other words, Google is not just adding AI to search; it is trying to rebuild the internet experience around AI itself.
That shift has major implications. If users get what they need directly from AI-generated responses, fewer clicks will flow to publishers and websites. The article suggests this could redraw the economics of online content, weaken the long-standing dominance of link-based discovery, and force the broader web ecosystem to adapt to a new model where visibility depends less on ranking in search results and more on being usable by AI systems.
The piece positions Google I/O 2026 as a turning point: after decades of organizing the web around search results, Google is now attempting to reorganize it around AI.