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Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella gets honest about Bing's chances against Google

Aaron Mok   

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella gets honest about Bing's chances against Google
Tech2 min read
  • Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft, said Google's dominance of online search is hurting Bing, WSJ reported.
  • The CEO spoke as a witness in the Justice Department's antitrust trial against Google.

Even Satya Nadella, the CEO of Microsoft, may not think the company's search engine Bing has a chance against Google.

Earlier this week, as part of the US Department of Justice's antitrust case against Google, Nadella went to Washington, DC, to testify in support of the theory that Google used unfair practices to establish dominance over the search engine market — including against Bing, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Google's deals with Apple, which made Google the default search on Safari, helped it become the industry leader, Nadella said, according to the Journal.

"You get up in the morning, you brush your teeth, and you search on Google," Nadella told the Justice Department. "With that level of habit forming, the only way to change is by changing defaults."

The result for Microsoft, Nadella said, is a "vicious cycle" — and Bing can't keep up.

The CEO even expressed doubts as to whether Microsoft's AI capabilities could help Bing finally beat Google, a theory he suggested to The Verge earlier this year.

"The distribution advantage Google has today doesn't go away," Nadella said in Washington, according to the Journal. "In fact, if anything, I worry a lot that—even in spite of my enthusiasm that there is a new angle with AI— this vicious cycle that I'm trapped in could even become even more vicious because the defaults get reinforced."

In October 2020, the DOJ filed a lawsuit against Google over accusations that the company used "anticompetitive and exclusionary practices" to dominate online search. The trial began last month and is ongoing.

Google didn't immediately respond to Insider's request for comment ahead of publication. Microsoft declined to comment.

The Microsoft CEO's comments came after the company bet big on AI. In January, Microsoft announced a $10 billion investment into OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT.

A month later, Microsoft released a beta version of its new AI-powered Bing search engine — it was released to everyone in May — which the company said could generate an additional $2 billion in ad revenue.

Even Google was scared for its own search business. In December, CEO Sundar Pichai redirected several teams at Google to work on its own AI products, and the day before Microsoft announced the revamped Bing, Google unveiled its own AI chatbot, Bard.

But Bing has struggled to chip away at Google's share of the search market. As of September, Bing was found to only have a 3.03% slice of the online search pie, compared to Google's 91.56%, according to data from market research firm Statcounter.

As Daniel Tunkelang, a search consultant who previously worked with Google, told the Journal in August: the revamped Bing is "cute, but not a game changer."


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