
Google I/O 2026 conference was held in Mountain View (California) on May 19-20. It is traditionally Google’s main annual event for developers, technology companies and the advertising market.
This year the key topic was artificial intelligence and the Gemini ecosystem, noted BlogGoogle. The event was attended by Google executives, developers, Google Cloud platform partners, advertising agencies, AI startups and large corporate clients.
The main focus of the conference was integrating generative AI into virtually all Google products:
- Search;
- Android;
- Chrome;
- Workspace;
- YouTube;
- Google Cloud.
AI Overviews and the new Gemini features are already in use by hundreds of millions of users worldwide, according to the company. Google also introduced updated Gemini 3.5 Flash and Gemini Omni models focused on multimodal tasks and enterprise use.
Google is changing the very logic of search
The most high-profile announcement was Google saying it was making “the biggest search update in 25 years.”
It is about the transition from the classic model of links to generative AI answers. The new system independently forms a consolidated answer, analyzes several sources simultaneously, performs complex multi-step queries, and reduces the need for the user to navigate to websites.
In effect, Google is turning Search into an AI assistant on top of the Internet. This means that Google is entering a new level of competition with several strong players in the market, primarily OpenAI and Perplexity.
What this means for the media and SEO market
However, the novelties and intentions presented by Google are not only important for the AI product market itself.
The implications for publishers and news sites could be extremely serious.
Whereas the search engine used to send the user to the source site, AI Overviews increasingly leave the user inside the Google ecosystem.
This could lead to a reduction in organic traffic, lower advertising revenues, a realignment of SEO strategies and a change in the operating model of digital media as a whole.
According to estimates by Similarweb and a number of analytics companies, websites have already started to record a decline in conversions for some information queries after the launch of Google’s AI Answers.
News sites, educational platforms, SEO portals, review services, and content projects focused on search traffic may be particularly vulnerable.
Google turns AI into the infrastructure of the Internet
At the same time, Google is sharply increasing its investments in AI infrastructure.
Alphabet has previously stated that the company’s capital expenditures in 2025-2026 may exceed $75 billion, a significant part of which is allocated to data centers, AI chips, server infrastructure, development of Google Cloud and training of new Gemini models.
In other words, AI is becoming for Google not a separate product, but the basis of the entire ecosystem.
Globally, this means increased competition for computing power, increased power consumption in data centers, a stronger role for cloud platforms, and increased demand for NVIDIA AI chips and Google TPUs.
For the global economy, this sends a clear signal that the AI race is extending well beyond the technology sector. Changes are affecting digital advertising, e-commerce, media, cloud services, labor market, education, corporate data management, etc.
What conclusions Google I/O 2026 is pushing towards
In fact, the Google I/O 2026 conference showed that the transition to an AI Internet is beginning, where generative models become the mediator between the user and information.
For media, this means the need to adapt to a new search model, where the key role begins to play:
- Brand authority;
- unique analytics;
- structured data;
- expert content;
- suitability of materials for AI search.
These changes in Google’s search ecosystem directly affect not only global media, but also local media.
For the Moldovan market, this means that every publication present on the Internet will need:
- a change in SEO approaches;
- taking into account the growing importance of Google Discover;
- increasing competition for AI visibility;
- increasing the role of quality original content.
Against the backdrop of the proliferation of AI search, newsrooms will have to adapt content not only for traditional search, but also for generative response systems like Gemini, ChatGPT and Perplexity.









