BANGKOK – Google’s Gemini 3.5 Flash has turned the traditional search engine into a smart AI assistant. For everyday users, it feels like magic. But for Thai businesses, content creators, and news publishers, it is becoming a fight for survival.
The internet has changed forever. If you open Google today, the experience is vastly different from just a few years ago. The familiar list of ten blue links has been pushed down. In its place sits a large, dynamic search box, powered by advanced artificial intelligence models like Gemini 3.5 Flash.
Instead of showing you where to find the answer, Google now reads the web for you and gives you the answer directly.
This shift to an “AI-first assistant” is a massive technological leap. It is fast, helpful, and highly convenient. But beneath the surface, a quiet crisis is brewing. Here in Thailand, the change has sparked widespread controversy.
Businesses that rely on search traffic are seeing their visitor numbers plummet. Content creators are raising alarms. And in a strange twist, Google’s own massive advertising revenue model might be at risk.
Let us break down exactly what is happening, why it matters to the Thai economy, and how businesses are trying to survive this new digital era.
The Rise of the AI-First Assistant
To understand the problem, we first need to understand the change. For decades, Google operated as a digital library. You typed in a question, and Google handed you a list of books (websites) that contained the answer. It was up to you to click on those websites, read the content, and find what you needed.
The new Google interface changes this completely. Powered by the Gemini 3.5 Flash model, the search engine now acts as a personal researcher.
When a user in Bangkok searches for “how to register a new company in Thailand,” Google does not just give them a link to a law firm’s blog. Instead, the AI reads dozens of legal blogs in milliseconds. It then writes a neat, bulleted summary right on the search page. It gives you the exact steps, the required documents, and the estimated costs.
For the user, this is incredible. You get your answer in five seconds. You do not have to click on any external websites. You do not have to dodge pop-up ads or accept cookies.
But for the creators of those websites, this is a nightmare. This phenomenon is known in the tech industry as a “zero-click search.” The user gets their answer without ever clicking a link.
The Threat to Thai Businesses and Content Creators
Thailand has a vibrant digital economy. From bustling travel blogs covering hidden cafes in Chiang Rai to large e-commerce platforms and local news outlets, millions of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) depend on Google.
For years, the formula for online success was simple:
- Write great, helpful content.
- Rank high on Google search results.
- Get clicks and website visitors.
- Turn those visitors into customers or make money from displaying ads.
Google’s AI overhaul breaks this chain. When the AI generates a direct answer, the need to click disappears.
Why Publishers Are Raising Alarms
News publishers and independent content creators are among the hardest hit. Let us look at a practical example. Imagine a Thai food blogger who spends a week researching, cooking, and photographing a recipe for authentic Massaman curry. They post it on their website.
In the past, someone searching for a “Massaman curry recipe” would click the blogger’s link. The blogger would earn a few cents from ads shown on their page.
Today, Google’s AI box simply reads the blogger’s recipe and displays the ingredients and steps directly on the search page. The user cooks the meal, perfectly satisfied, and closes the browser. The blogger gets zero traffic, zero recognition, and zero ad revenue.
Publishers argue this is unfair. They claim Google is taking their hard work, using it to train its AI models, and then using that same AI to steal their audience. Without website traffic, independent journalism, travel blogging, and expert advice, websites simply cannot survive. They cannot pay their staff or keep their servers running if nobody visits their actual web pages.
The Looming Crash of Google AdSense Revenue
Here is where the story gets incredibly interesting. By trying to give users the best possible experience, Google might be accidentally harming its own business.
Google makes the vast majority of its money through advertising. One of its biggest products is Google AdSense.
How AdSense Used to Work
Google AdSense is a network. Google acts as a middleman between companies that want to show ads and website owners who have space for ads.
- A local shoe brand pays Google to show its ads.
- A Thai sports blog puts Google AdSense code on its website.
- When a user visits the sports blog, they see the shoe ad.
- Google gets paid, and Google shares a cut of that money with the sports blog.
This system relies on one vital thing: people visiting the sports blog.
The AI Paradox
With the new AI-first assistant, users are staying on the Google search page and not visiting the sports blog. Because website traffic is dropping massively across the board, fewer pages are loading. Because fewer pages are loading, fewer AdSense advertisements are being seen.
If this trend continues, Google is going to see a massive decline in its AdSense revenue. It is a strange paradox. Google has built a tool so powerful and helpful that it eliminates the need for the very websites that display Google’s own advertisements.
Industry experts at Search Engine Land have pointed out that while Google can show ads inside the AI search box, it might not be enough to make up for the billions of dollars lost if the wider web ecosystem collapses. If content creators stop writing new articles because they cannot make money, the AI will eventually run out of fresh, high-quality information to read.
The User Rebellion: Seeking Traditional Search Engines
While many users love the convenience of the AI summaries, a growing segment of internet users in Thailand is pushing back. Not everyone wants a machine to summarize the world for them.
There are a few reasons why the AI overhaul is frustrating to some:
- Loss of Human Voice: Sometimes, you do not want a dry, robotic summary. If you are looking for a review of a new hotel in Phuket, you want to read a real person’s opinion. You want to see their photos and hear about their personal experience.
- The Cluttered Interface: For users who just want a simple link, the giant AI box takes up too much space on a mobile phone screen. It pushes the actual, useful website links far down the page.
- Hallucinations: AI is not perfect. Sometimes, it makes things up. These mistakes are called “hallucinations.” If you are searching for important medical or financial advice in Thailand, an AI mistake can be dangerous.
Because of these frustrations, we are seeing a noticeable shift in user behavior. A growing number of Thais are exploring alternative search engines.
The Alternatives Gaining Ground
- Bing: Microsoft’s search engine has its own AI, but it is deeply integrated with traditional search links. Some users find Bing’s layout cleaner and better at balancing AI answers with real website links.
- DuckDuckGo: This search engine is famous for protecting user privacy. It does not track your searches. As Google becomes more integrated and data-hungry with its AI models, privacy-conscious Thais are making DuckDuckGo their default search engine. It offers a clean, old-school search experience.
- Startpage: Similar to DuckDuckGo, Startpage gives you high-quality search results but without tracking your personal data. It appeals to users who just want “ten blue links” without a robot trying to talk to them.
This migration, while still in its early stages, shows that users want choices. They do not want to be forced into an AI-only world.
What Google is Doing to Fix the Issue
Google is not blind to these problems. The company is well aware of the controversy and the potential threat to its own revenue. They know that if they destroy the open web, they destroy the foundation of their own search engine.
To address the anger from publishers and the drop in website traffic, Google is testing several new strategies.
1. Adding Better Hyperlinks
In early versions of the AI search box, links to the sources were hard to find. Google has recently started updating the interface to make source links much more visible. Now, when the Gemini 3.5 Flash model writes a summary, it includes clear, clickable citation boxes right next to the text. Google hopes this will encourage users to click through to the original websites to read more.
2. Focusing on Complex Questions
Google is tweaking its AI to back off from simple, subjective searches. If you search for “What is the capital of Thailand,” the AI will answer directly. But if you search for “What does it feel like to ride a scooter in Bangkok traffic,” Google is learning that an AI cannot answer this. It is shifting the system to show human-written blog posts and videos instead.
3. Exploring Publisher Agreements
According to reports from tech news outlets like The Verge, Google and other tech giants are exploring ways to pay massive news organizations for the right to use their content in AI summaries. However, while this might help giant media companies in the United States, it does little to help a small, independent blogger in Chiang Mai.
4. New Ad Formats
To protect its revenue, Google is testing new ways to put advertisements directly inside the AI answers. If you ask the AI for the best running shoes, the AI will give you advice, but it will also feature sponsored product links seamlessly woven into the text.
How Thai Businesses Can Adapt and Survive
The reality is that AI search is here to stay. Gemini 3.5 Flash is just the beginning. The search engines of the future will only get smarter. So, how do businesses in Thailand survive in a world where users no longer need to click?
The answer lies in giving users something the AI cannot create.
Focus on E-E-A-T
Google has a set of guidelines for website owners called E-E-A-T, which stands for Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. In the age of AI, the first “E” (Experience) is your greatest weapon.
AI can summarize facts, but it cannot experience the world.
- An AI can tell you the ingredients of a dish, but it cannot tell you how it tastes.
- An AI can list the specs of a camera, but it cannot tell you how heavy it feels on a long hike.
Thai content creators must pivot from writing simple, fact-based articles to sharing deep, personal, human experiences.
Build Direct Relationships
Businesses can no longer rely on Google as their only source of customers. If Google is not sending traffic, businesses must build direct lines of communication with their audience.
- Email Newsletters: Encourage visitors to sign up for emails. This allows you to speak to your customers directly, bypassing Google entirely.
- Social Media Communities: Build strong groups on platforms like Facebook, LINE, or TikTok. Engage with your local Thai audience where they already spend their time.
- Video and Audio: AI struggles to replicate the connection built through video and podcasts. Creating engaging YouTube videos or TikTok shorts is a great way to show a human face and build trust.
Create Interactive Content
If your website just has text, the AI will steal it. But if your website has interactive tools, users must visit your page. For example, a Thai real estate website shouldn’t just write about property taxes. They should build an interactive property tax calculator. Users have to click the link and visit the site to use the tool.
The Future of Search in Thailand
We are living through the biggest shift in internet history since the invention of the smartphone. Google’s transition into an AI-first assistant powered by Gemini 3.5 Flash is an incredible technological achievement. It saves time, simplifies research, and organizes the world’s information faster than ever before.
However, progress always comes with a price.
The widespread controversy in Thailand is justified. Content creators are seeing their hard work summarized without credit. Local businesses are watching their organic traffic disappear. Even Google is facing a potential crisis with its AdSense revenue, as the very web ecosystem it relies on begins to shrink.
The growing popularity of alternative search engines like DuckDuckGo and Bing shows that the public is still deciding what kind of internet they want. Do we want a single, all-knowing AI box? Or do we want the messy, human, and diverse web of links that we grew up with?
Google is trying to walk a very thin line. They must provide the best AI experience to keep users happy, while also sending enough traffic to websites to keep creators from quitting.
For Thai businesses, the days of writing simple articles and waiting for Google traffic are over. The new era requires deep expertise, strong human connection, and building direct communities. The AI can summarize the facts, but it cannot replace the genuine human experience. Those who understand this will survive the zero-click revolution. Those who do not will simply fade into the background of a machine-generated summary.
Trending Tech News:
Google, Microsoft, and Amazon Are Carving Up the AI Agent Market
Beyond Telehealth: The Hidden AI Wave Reshaping Thailand’s Healthcare




