AI promises efficiency, and it promises speed. It promises to cut through the noise of the internet and give us exactly what we want, exactly when we want it. No waiting, better results than ever before.
And, Google’s new AI Overviews, which provide instant summaries at the top of search results, are a perfect example of this. No more clicking through ten blue links, or opening three tabs just to compare coverage. Ask your question, and within seconds you have an AI-manufactured answer that is exactly what you were looking for.
No doubt about it, AI feels revolutionary, but it also raises an uncomfortable question – if AI can summarise everything, will anyone bother to read the news in full? And arguably more importantly, why should they?
The Age of Instant Gratification
The internet has always trained us to want things quickly. We want next-day deliveries and one-click checkouts. For heaven’s sake, we want television shows to be released all at once so we can binge them in a weekend.
Indeed, news consumption is no different. The rise of social media and mobile notifications means we’ve become accustomed to bite-sized updates that inform us in seconds.
AI is simply the latest, and arguably most powerful, version of this. A story that might once have taken 600 carefully written words by a professional journalist with many years of experience is now distilled into three sentences by a machine. The temptation to treat that as “enough” is obvious, but how do we resist, and why should we?
Publishers are already seeing the consequences. According to DMG Media, reported click-through rates have fallen by as much as 89% since Google’s AI Overviews were introduced. For readers, it’s simple math – why waste time loading another page when the essential detail is sitting right in front of you, neatly packaged by an algorithm? No wasting time sifting through oodles of results, no organising your findings and no figuring out what’s accurate and what’s not.
This is instant gratification at its purest, but the difficulty is that convenience can come at a cost, and most of the time, it does.
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Efficiency Versus Understanding
It’s worth asking what we lose when everything is boiled down into summaries. Summaries tell us what happened, but rarely do they explain why. And if they do, it’s quick and matter of fact, without much substance. They rarely capture the nuance, the competing perspectives and the human voices that make an issue complicated or important.Without those things, what are we really left with?
Consider something like international conflict, economic policy or climate change. A summary can provide an outline of the story – a battle took place, a policy was announced, a temperature record was broken. But, those outlines don’t equate to understanding. They don’t show the lived experience of the people affected, they don’t interrogate the motives of the decision-makers, and they don’t explore the trade-offs or the long-term consequences.
The paradox here is that AI is becoming almost too efficient. It gives the impression that reading further is unnecessary, that you already know enough, but at the same time, knowing enough to feel informed is not the same as actually being informed.
Don’t be fooled, this isn’t just a philosophical problem, it’s a practical one too. Democracies rely on citizens who have more than a surface-level grasp of issues, and economies depend on people making choices based on more than headlines. If the news becomes something we only skim through AI filters, we risk building a society of half-truths and shallow takes.
And the truth is, we already have too much of that in a world in which the full story is openly and readily available, and things aren’t great – what happens when we remove the substance we do have (or allow it to become less attractive)?
The Economics of Attention
There is also the question of sustainability. There’s no two ways around the fact that journalism is expensive. Investigative reporting, foreign correspondence and even local news coverage all require time, money and people. For decades, the implicit deal has been that search engines like Google drive traffic to publishers, who in turn monetise it through advertising or subscriptions.
But, AI Overviews change that deal. As David Higgerson, chief digital publisher at Reach (owner of the Mirror and Daily Express), told the BBC, publishers create the “accurate, timely, trustworthy content that basically fuels Google,” but now Google is reducing the need for anyone to click through to it. The financial reward stays with the distributor, not the creator.
So, it’s not surprising that a coalition of publishers and advocacy groups filed a complaint to the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority earlier this year, accusing Google of “misusing” publisher content. The outcome remains uncertain, but the sentiment is clear – news organisations feel they are being hollowed out by the very platforms that rely on them.
And this matters for readers too. If publishers can’t sustain themselves, fewer stories will be written, and fewer investigations will be funded. We may get more summaries, but they’ll become progressively less subtantial. The “efficiency” of AI could ultimately reduce the diversity and depth of information available in the first place. And, if that’s the case, efficiency won’t be more much.
So, Why Read the Full Article?
Often, AI-related conversations are centred on the idea that AI tech can do things the same, if not better, than old methods, but that people should still choose the “old school” methods. But, nobody wants to ask the difficult quetion – that is, but why should they? Why should they want to do that? And in this context, why should anyone read the news in full when the summary is right there?
Well, as much as the question itself may seem pessimistive, there are actually several good answers.
First, because context matters. Summaries may be accurate, but they are rarely complete. Understanding a story fully often requires knowing what came before, what might come next and how the pieces connect. That only comes from reading beyond the surface and exploring multiple different opinions and persepctives from a range of different sources, and it’s important to know what these sources are.
Second, because human perspective matters. Journalism isn’t just about relaying facts it’s about framing them, questioning them and adding voices that AI can’t replicate. A machine may condense, but it can’t investigate corruption, interview witnesses or convey the tone of a courtroom (at least for now)
Third, because democracy matters. An informed public isn’t built on summaries. It’s built on depth, debate and disagreement. Choosing to read the full article is an act of citizenship as much as an act of curiosity, and the importance of this can’t be overstated.
Finally, because quality matters. If publishers can’t attract readers, their business models collapse. If we want journalism to exist tomorrow, it’s not enough to skim today. Supporting publishers by clicking through, subscribing or engaging directly is part of keeping the system alive.
Beyond Efficiency
AI is here to stay, whether we like it or not. The question isn’t whether we should use it – rather, it’s about how we should use it and how we should balance its efficiency with the deeper needs of society.
For readers, that means resisting the urge to settle for the fastest answer every time. For publishers, it means experimenting with new ways to build direct relationships through things like newsletters, podcasts, apps or communities where loyalty is stronger than convenience. For regulators, it means ensuring the platforms that profit from journalism also contribute fairly to its future.
Perhaps most of all, it requires recognising that efficiency is not the only goal worth pursuing. Sometimes, it’s worth spending five minutes with a full article instead of thirty seconds with a summary. Not because the summary is wrong, but because it’s just not good enough.
If AI can summarise everything, the challenge for all of us is to remember why we should still care to read more.