cover of episode TikTok’s Spying Scandal + ChatGPT Puts Google on Notice + Phone Jail

TikTok’s Spying Scandal + ChatGPT Puts Google on Notice + Phone Jail

Publish Date: 2023/1/6
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This podcast is supported by KPMG. Your task as a visionary leader is simple. Harness the power of AI. Shape the future of business. Oh, and do it before anyone else does without leaving people behind or running into unforeseen risks. Simple, right? KPMG's got you. Helping you lead a people-powered transformation that accelerates AI's value with confidence. How's that for a vision? Learn more at www.kpmg.us.ai.

Casey, happy new year! It's so good to be back in the studio. How are you? I am great, and I am extremely excited to be back making Hard Fork. How was your break? It was a lot of fun. One of my favorite things was getting a DM from a high school student who said that after listening to us, he had used ChatGPT to finish his assignments before finals. Amazing. Changing lives. Changing lives one episode at a time.

How was your holiday? It was good. You know, I caught up on my classical Latin studies. I watched some Criterion film collection. I just did a lot of very productive work. No, I watched movies and ate cookies and fixed my mom's router as a good tech columnist son should do. Did you really have to fix the router? Yeah, I did. It was like, it was, you know, she's got nominally high speed internet, but it's like it basically dial up in there.

And I was like, what's going on? After years of this suffering through my mom's bad Wi-Fi, I was finally like, I'm just going to do this. A good son should fix his mom's Wi-Fi router. So I did. I mean, routers to me are a sort of final frontier in terms of difficulty. Whenever you have to log into the router, it's like you're sort of Googling, trying to figure out what's the right address to go to, what is the sort of default system password. But you actually made it into the router. Yeah.

I did, I did. I hacked the mainframe and she's getting a decent download and upload speeds now. So, you know, now we can video chat from my mom's house. Can I tell you how I solved the problem of always being asked to fix things at my parents' house over the holidays? Yes. We started doing Christmas at my brother's.

I'm Kevin Roos. I'm a tech columnist at The New York Times. I'm Casey Newton from Platformer. This week, we talked to Forbes reporter Emily Baker-White about why TikTok spied on her and what that means for the app's future. Also, ChatGPT has Google on high alert. And my phone now lives in a box. ♪

Casey, in our last episode before the holiday break, we were doing predictions. One of my predictions was that in 2023, the U.S. government would finally ban TikTok. Which at the time I thought was a very melodramatic prediction. Yeah, you kind of looked askance at me like, who is this guy and what is he smoking? But two things happened over the break that made me even more confident that my prediction is going to come true.

The first is that the Biden administration, as part of its spending bill, passed a provision that would ban TikTok from government-owned devices.

devices. The second thing, which I think for people who favor a ban on TikTok is kind of a smoking gun, is that the company was found to have surveilled at least three American journalists. One of them is Emily Baker-White from Forbes, who's here with us today. Emily, welcome to Hard Fork. Thank you so much for having me. So tell us about this scoop. What made TikTok and ByteDance spy on you?

So I started reporting on TikTok and ByteDance last year when I was at BuzzFeed News. I reported on something called Project Texas, which is basically the company's efforts to try to rewire its data systems to narrow the number of people abroad that can access sensitive U.S. user data. And after I started reporting on this, a source leaked me audio from over 80 internal meetings at TikTok and ByteDance about Project Texas. I published a story about it. And I

After that, I think TikTok and ByteDance kind of freaked out a little bit.

And they started a leak investigation called Project Raven. Sounds really hardcore. The goal of the investigation was to find out who was sourcing me. And part of the investigation entailed a ByteDance team. This is a team that doesn't work for TikTok. It works for TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, using the TikTok app to track my location via my IP address to try to see if I was meeting with any TikTok or ByteDance employees, which means they were also tracking their employees'

IP address-based location as well. I mean, as a reporter, this is one of the scariest things that you can find out, right? You know, all of us in the course of our work are talking to folks who are not authorized to speak with us. We take every step we can to protect them. But we also sort of do it assuming that the company is not going to look too hard in most cases for who we're talking to, right? It's usually not going to be worth it to them. So, you know, what can you tell us about sort of how you found out that this was happening and how did you react?

Yeah, so I found out about Project Raven through sources inside the company. I'm not going to tell you much more than that. But eventually, I was able to review internal materials that let me know about this project. And we first reported on this in October. But we reported on it in a much more general way than we ultimately did in December in order to protect sources, right? So I wasn't going to say...

exactly what I knew because doing so could have let the company know who was talking to me. And so that report that we put out in October used a higher level of generality. We said that there was a plan to track the locations of individual U.S. citizens. I knew at the time that I was among those people, but we didn't say for what purpose and we didn't say who the people were.

And when we published that story in October, TikTok and ByteDance didn't actually deny it, but they went on Twitter and they said my reporting lacked integrity. They said that it wasn't possible that the app could have been used to track location because it doesn't track GPS level location, which I assume is true. But we know that there are other ways to get location and IP address is one of those ways. And they said that TikTok had never been used to target journalists. And, um,

They later admitted three days before Christmas that it happened. So there's a lot there I want to drill down on. But I sort of want to ask, like, when you learn about the ominously named Project Raven and you learn that you've been targeted, that the company has your IP address and is using that to try to figure out who your sources are,

How did you feel? Unimpressed, sort of disappointed, honestly. Like, first of all, I'm a millennial. I don't like when my phone talks at me without my permission. I just like, I don't like autoplay videos in any context. And so like, I've never gotten very into TikTok. I like used it a little bit a couple of times, but like,

I just deleted it off my phone and was like, "Really guys? Who decided that this was a good cost-benefit decision?" - Totally. - It's definitely the case that if you had been conducting all of your communications with your sources over TikTok DM, that probably would have been a bad move on your part. - Yeah. - I mean, it is not totally unprecedented for a tech company to do this, right? I mean, a couple of years ago, Uber was found to be looking up journalists' ride histories. I think Microsoft got in trouble because it looked at a journalist's Hotmail account

So this kind of thing happens, but it's rare because it's so risky. But also, and just to sort of like get into like the why this really matters, one of the reasons that TikTok is in such trouble right now, one of the reasons that we're seeing bans across states and the federal government is so many lawmakers and regulators are concerned that TikTok data could be used against Americans in part to surveil them.

And until recently, you know, TikTok could dismiss that as a conspiracy theory. And yet now we know that it was actually true, that the company did, at least in this case, surveil Americans. So, Emily, I'm curious, like, what's been the fallout at ByteDance and TikTok from your reporting on this Project Raven case?

surveillance operation. I think a lot of people inside the company are horrified that this happened. Like, they say they have closed this particular data opening for people in China to access U.S. user data. But I think it just shows that really

a couple of people who have access to user data in a way that maybe isn't unreasonable on its face, a couple of people can pull some data that they're not really supposed to pull and

At a company of this size, given the number of people who need access to user data for their job, data access controls across geographic boundaries are really hard and really tricky. But my understanding is that this wasn't just some low-level employee in the IT department sort of getting curious about who you were talking to. This had buy-in from some of the highest levels of ByteDance, right?

Yeah, ByteDance and TikTok have certainly tried to frame this as a few bad actors. If it was a few bad actors, it was a few bad actors receiving orders from their bad actor bosses. So it definitely wasn't it wasn't rogue people, but it shows how easy it would be for rogue people to do this. I just think it's a terrible unforced error. Why would you think this is a good idea? And I say that for all of these companies that have done this. Like, what are you guys thinking?

Right. And I think the theme that's been running through a lot of your coverage, at least as I read it, is that, you know, ByteDance and TikTok, they're in kind of this fight for their life in the United States. And part of how they're trying to survive this regulatory scrutiny is by claiming and demonstrating that even though ByteDance owns TikTok, they operate at arm's length. There aren't people sort of in Beijing who are like pulling the strings on TikTok in the U.S.,

And what your reporting has shown is I think that those ties are much closer than ByteDance and TikTok have been letting on, that there are lots of Chinese nationals making decisions about U.S. TikTok. The systems that these two companies use are, in fact, use a lot of the same tools, that it's sort of a big...

sort of mess of how would you even untangle those? So I think that, to me, felt like the sort of insight that you've been reporting toward is that this company is not being totally forthright about the level of involvement that its parent company, ByteDance, has with its U.S. operations. Is that a fair reading? I think definitely, yes. And one of the things that makes this tricky is, like, there's nothing nefarious about Chinese nationals making decisions about how to run a tech company, right? Like, that's a super normal thing. But

But I think where the company gets in trouble is its representations about who is in charge, who is making what decisions, and how entangled TikTok and ByteDance really are.

are. Like I have one source who had a contract with TikTok, but got a W-2 from ByteDance. I have another source who got some of their checks from TikTok from ByteDance. Every at TikTok email alias is actually an at ByteDance email alias. Like the systems are linked. Everybody at TikTok uses ByteDance's VPN called SEAL. Everybody at TikTok uses ByteDance's internal like Slack equivalent, which is called LARC.

And so, again, there's sort of nothing nefarious about this, but ByteDance has built dozens of apps. It's known sort of as an app factory. And at first, TikTok was just another one of those. And so all of the like the dozens and dozens of internal tools that make the app run and every major tech company has such tools.

were built by engineers in China and largely have been managed by engineers in China. And so I think TikTok and ByteDance are really trying to separate all of those systems, but it's really hard to separate them. And it's really hard to like know if you've got them all, just knowing how big the backend of a company of this size is. So there's sort of like two buckets of concern in Washington about TikTok, right? There's the sort of disinformation

data misuse surveillance spying concern that TikTok could essentially be used by the Chinese government to spy on the location or the data of American citizens. There's also kind of this influence bucket, the sort of China could use TikTok and the Chinese government could use TikTok to sort of insert propaganda or pro-Chinese sentiment into its apps so that American users of these apps would get a sort of

you know, distorted picture of life in China or just that TikTok would be used in some way to undermine U.S. interests. Of those two buckets, which do you think people should be more concerned about? I love this question. Honestly, I have spent more time reporting on the bucket that I think Ezra Klein called it the data espionage bucket. And I think that one gets talked about more.

But the second one is like way, I think, under discussed because recommendations algorithms are complex. We know this, but we also know that they can influence public opinion in all kinds of ways. And I feel like we've talked a lot about this when it comes to Facebook, when it comes to YouTube. And somehow we haven't talked about it.

with TikTok as much. And I think we should because very subtle changes to a recommendations algorithm that is powering many millions of phones can change how people think about an election or a pandemic, right? And like, we know this from the other platforms. It's just as true when it comes to TikTok, but now we have this sort of additional layer of geopolitics.

Right. Like you think about what the Russians had to do to interfere in the 2016 election. And it was like, well, they had to buy a bunch of Facebook ads. They had to create Facebook pages and Facebook groups and a bunch of like fake people. Then they had to like trick Americans into going to rallies. Right. Just to sort of sow dissent. But like if you're the Chinese government and you can just make a handful of phone calls to a bite. Yes, I'm not saying this has happened, but you could just sort of imagine it happening. And they're like, you know, what do you

we just sort of amplify a lot of like content of Americans screaming at each other and a lot of, you know, content about like the dysfunctional American politics and then maybe amplify some content about, you know, how beautiful China is and what a great vacation destination it is and how much people love their leaders there. And then, you know, maybe you throw in like a viral American flag burning challenge at some point. Right. And like you could do all of this. And to your point, Emily, there are no fingerprints on the algorithm. So nobody knows where it's coming from.

Yeah, I think that's right. And I think it's worth noting that people have told me that ByteDance has done this before. And we know that the Chinese government has done this before. So on that first part, I reported a story over the summer about an app called TopBuzz, which was a news aggregator app run by ByteDance. It no longer exists.

But former employees of ByteDance told me that TopBuzz had essentially like stickied or pinned to the top of its feed what they referred to as pro-China messages. I don't think this was like President Xi standing on a tank type of thing. I think it was like QPanda videos. And I don't know where exactly the organization

orders for this came from, but people told me that it had happened. By Dance denied that, by the way, when I reported on it.

So there's that out there. And then we know from what the Chinese government has done on other social platforms that they do run influence campaigns. I reported a story with a colleague of mine, Ian Martin, about how the Chinese government had, through an entity called MediaLynx, run a bunch of TikToks about American politics, about specific politicians.

before the 22 midterms. And TikTok is still the only major social platform out there today that doesn't label state media accounts. And they say they've been working on this for a long time. They rushed out labels on Russian state media accounts after Russia invaded Ukraine.

But the rest of their state media policy has been in limbo. And man, if I worked there, I would be making some noise about getting that out faster. Because if, like all other platforms, they just label Chinese state media as Chinese state media,

they would be able to say, yeah, governments run, you know, these accounts on our platform. They run them on all platforms. Right. I mean, I think inside TikTok from the folks that I've talked to there, there's a feeling that this kind of theory that they're, you know, puppet of the Chinese government is like a xenophobic sort of red panic sentiment. Yeah. And, you know, I thought that for a while. And then I'm like, well, but

There is all this documented history of TikTok being used and other ByteDance products being used in these exact ways. It feels like a conspiracy that we've learned in part through your reporting is actually true. Yeah, I was in the same boat as Kevin, also having those conversations with the TikTok employees. And then last summer, I did read your story about TopBuzz, and I thought...

wow, this thing that for so long they have sort of dismissed and waved away and said we would never do, you suddenly had this reporting and said, no, it actually did happen. And so now time and time again, TikTok has told us one thing and then something else has turned out to be true, which I think has led us to this place now where governors and lawmakers have said enough is enough. We just don't trust this company. Right, right. I want to

talk about what's happening in Washington now. And over the past couple of months, it really seems like this momentum in this effort to ban TikTok or otherwise kind of separate the U.S. part of TikTok from ByteDance is really gaining steam. So can you just catch us up on like what sort of pressure is TikTok facing at the moment? Who is taking a look at them? Who is making decisions about their future in the U.S.?

For the past several years, TikTok has been negotiating a national security agreement with CFIUS, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. And CFIUS is a panel of a bunch of government agencies that work together to try to

assess the risk caused by foreign ownership of companies and figure out what to do about it. And TikTok and Sifia thought they were going to be done negotiating this contract a long time ago, several times now. They've had a lot of deadlines that they've missed, and that's probably not terribly uncommon. But I do think as...

As CFIUS has sort of learned more about TikTok, various like different fears have arisen. And I think just sort of going back to Project Texas, this is TikTok's big effort to ameliorate national security concerns and to rebuild TikTok to sort of

sever most of its ties to the ByteDance backend that created it. They've spent a huge amount of money on this. They've spent a huge amount of time on it. They're really trying to make it work. And I think the problem is that I was talking to someone at one point who said it's like trying to untangle a pile of spaghetti. And I think that's really true. Just the way that these things are built, data flows fast.

all kinds of directions all the time to power, I don't know, a sales dashboard here or a data pipeline over here that's, you know, helping this monetization tool, right? Like, again, this isn't nefarious data flowage. It's just data flowage. That's just how these things are built. And...

Even cataloging and understanding all of the tools and then all of the ways that data flow inside the tools is so hard, especially given that a lot of people who built the tools aren't there anymore, that I think a lot of people are just really worried about

Being able to prove that they've gotten them all. I want to play you a clip from the CEO of TikTok, Shouchu, who got interviewed by my colleague Andrew Ross Sorkin at our Dealbook Summit. And in this clip, Shouchu talked about some of these data access issues. And I just want to play that clip for you and get your reaction to it.

So let me ask you this. So this is FBI leader Chris Wray to the House Homeland Security Committee. He said he's, quote, extremely concerned that under Chinese law, Chinese companies are required to do whatever the Chinese government wants them to do in terms of sharing information or serving as a tool of the Chinese government. What happens in the reality behind the scenes in terms of how this actually works or happens? So the FBI director, through his team, through CFIUS, has a...

access to the discussions and the plans that we are building to solve and address this problem and I'm very confident that This will address the concerns that he has raised now for us, you know No, you as got no foreign government has asked us for us user data before really the heaven and if they did we would say no we have a transparency report that we publish every quarter like most other consumer internet companies and in that report we spell out the details of our

the various data requests that various governments around the world have asked of the citizens of their country. And we want to make it very transparent so you can keep your eye on that report to see, you know, the kind of requests that we are disclosing. So one thing is that TikTok has repeatedly said they've never been asked for data. This gets back to the sort of porous relationship between TikTok and its parent company. I would like to hear ByteDance answer that question, and I'm not sure they ever squarely have. And

And I can't help but think of a great piece of reporting the New York Times did a while back about the limits of show-choose power, right? And the fact that some decision-making about TikTok has happened among ByteDance leadership instead of TikTok leadership. And I think if ByteDance were answering under all of those questions, I think we would get a broader picture. Because as we know, at least as of when I was being surveilled,

ByteDance employees who never report into the TikTok leadership chain had access to my IP address. Right. And so in other words, if ByteDance had to answer the same question under oath, they would probably have to say, well, like, yes, in fact, we have been asked for user data by some governments around the world. You know, also, all of us have reported on platforms like, you know, Google and Meta and Twitter and iTunes.

All of those platforms get requests for user data all the time, and they publish reports where they're getting tens of thousands of requests. So the idea that TikTok, which is one of the largest platforms in the world, has never gotten a request for user data from a government, it just strains credulity. Yeah, we do know that that happens all the time and that these platforms do turnover stuff all the time. I don't know that ByteDance would answer the question differently. I just want to point out that they haven't answered it yet.

I'd like to hear their answer. Right. So right now, TikTok is furiously trying to pull off this Project Texas thing that would involve migrating all of its U.S. operations to servers controlled by Oracle and sort of making the division between TikTok and ByteDance more clear and hardening it.

But it seems like all of this is going to end up being too little too late for regulators in Washington. Politico reported just last month that the Department of Justice and the Treasury Department were in sort of the final stages of a deal with TikTok and that there was some disagreement about whether TikTok

TikTok would be forced to sell its U.S. operations to an American company or whether it would just have some kind of lighter punishment, like having to do this Project Texas thing, maybe set up like a security council made up of U.S. citizens. So what do you think the resolution here is likely to be? I know you're not a fortune teller, but do you have a sense of where this is going to end up? Are we going to see TikTok sold to a U.S. company this year? I don't know. Yeah.

Sorry for that lame answer. But I think it is more likely that CFIUS will mandate a sale to a U.S. company than it previously was. I'll say that. I think there is definitely momentum in that direction. There are also lawmakers of both parties, people in both houses of our legislature who are saying too little too late, who are saying like,

Hey, Sifia, y'all better do something or else we're going to. And I think that gets to one sort of overarching point here, which is that right now there's no national security agreement. And so the people who are worried that TikTok is a national security risk and needs a solution right now, they're just operating without whatever solution people want that to be. So I understand why people are getting impatient. Mm hmm.

You also reported one of your stories last year, featured some TikTok and ByteDance employees kind of talking about Project Texas and basically implying like it's kind of all for show. Like, yes, the data will be on Oracle servers, but really it's going to be us like running our own virtual machines. And so Oracle won't really be able to like control what we do. So do you get the sense that this is just kind of a

project for PR purposes? Or will this actually take ByteDance's ability away to control TikTok in any meaningful way? I don't think we know that yet. I would say...

It seems a little cheap to say it's just for show. That they have stood up departments. They have like paid contractors gazillions of dollars to help them catalog all their internal tools. If it's for show, it's really expensive for show. But I think people are still worried that it won't be a complete fix. And I think that is maybe the fairer way to say it might not be good enough.

I think saying it's just for show probably minimizes a lot of work that a lot of people have done who are really trying to fix a problem. But I understand why skeptics say it might not be good enough. Also, it's like at every company, there are people acting in good faith to do the right thing, and there are people trying to undermine them. And the question is, like, who has the most power in this situation, right? Like, I think there have been a lot of good faith efforts within TikTok based on my own conversations with some of their executives in which they're trying to do everything that Emily just pointed out.

And then, thanks to Emily's reporting, we also know that there are people spying on them. I will say, just as an aside, it's very funny to me that the question of is TikTok sort of above board is now being left to Larry Ellison's Oracle Corporation, which I would say is historically one of the most ruthless and conniving companies of all time. Larry Ellison, also famous for cheating to win the America's Cup yacht race. So if I were personally choosing who I wanted to audit TikTok's books, it would not be the Oracle Corporation. Yeah.

Well, I'm sorry. What about a yacht race? Oh, yeah. If you don't know about Larry Ellison cheating to win a yacht race, ask ChatGPT to tell you about that. Wow. It's a legendary story in the history of American technology executives. So, Emily, after all the reporting you've done on TikTok and ByteDance, do you think TikTok is a national security risk to the United States? Should it be banned? Those are two different questions.

I don't necessarily think a TikTok ban is the best answer because I think this won't be the only time this ever happens. We live in a global interconnected technological world.

And whether it's an app that has ties to the Iranian government or the Saudi government or whatever, there will be apps that have ties to governments with which the U.S. has uncozy relationships. I think it is reasonable to worry about how governments, including our own,

want to use the massive amount of information available through these tech giants that we use and rely on all the time.

I think just saying TikTok's a national security risk, we need to ban it. First of all, it doesn't create useful precedent for the next time this happens. And ideally, we will have a system where someone figures out sort of what the principles are, figures out what the risks are, and figures out what we think we need to do to mitigate those risks. I also think a lot of the risks posed by TikTok are...

are also posed by a bunch of domestic companies, too. Right. This is sort of the, well, Facebook collects data on us all the time, too, argument. Totally. Collects data and also influences what information we consume.

And so there are people who talk about how we should have a national data privacy law, and that might be a good thing. There are people who talk about how we should mandate more transparency about how companies influence what content we consume, and that seems like a good thing. And there may be another sort

sort of geopolitical international relations type of thing that you would want to layer on top of things for companies that have some relationship with foreign governments too. But I guess just saying let's ban TikTok, it's scary and bad, doesn't seem like the most sophisticated solution to the problem.

So I asked TikTok to comment on the revelations that its employees had been spying on Emily and others. And this is what a spokeswoman told me over email. Quote,

We take data security incredibly seriously, and we will continue to enhance our access protocols, which have already been significantly improved and hardened since this incident took place. Two final questions. One, is there anything you'd like to say to the ByteDance employee who's monitoring this podcast recording? LAUGHTER

My IP address won't help you. And last question. If TikTok is banned in the United States, in part because of your reporting, are you ready to face the wrath of hundreds of millions of teenagers? No, millions of teenagers in the U.S. I think the kids are smarter than we give them credit for. And I think if they're angry at TikTok,

regulators for doing a thing. They won't just be angry because their memes are gone. They'll be angry because they think the solution wasn't the best solution. I don't know. I have more faith in teenagers than other people, I guess. Emily Baker-White, you're a legend. Thank you for coming. Yeah, thanks so much. Thanks, guys. When we come back, ChatGPT puts Google on notice.

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How did you get it so green? I kept the cucumber skins on and pureed the entire thing. It's really easy to put together and it's something that you can do in advance. Oh, it is so refreshing. What'd you bring, Melissa?

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So news broke this week that Microsoft and OpenAI are working together on a chat GPT powered version of Bing. This was a story in the information, which was sourced to two people with direct knowledge of the plans. It said basically Microsoft is going to launch a version of Bing that uses the AI behind chat GPT to answer some search queries, and that Microsoft hopes that this new feature, which it wants to launch before the end of March, is going to help it compete with Google.

Microsoft is doing it. Bing GPT is going to be a reality. Yeah. So great report in the information. I learned so much about Bing. And one of the things that I learned was that apparently when Microsoft signed the deal with OpenAI to work together in 2019, this was essentially always the plan.

And in fact, they've been using these earlier versions of GPT in various aspects of Bing. The reason we didn't know this until this week is because no one has used Bing since 2019. But if you were to go there, you would apparently see rudiments of GPT already in the search engine. But of course, what is much more interesting is the idea that we had sort of talked about, which is, man, what if there is a search engine that's

that it delivers results that look much more like what we've all been enjoying on ChatGPT, but in something like Google or Bing. Right, and you had this great riff about how you'd started using ChatGPT for different kinds of searches, like what kinds of shoes should a man have in his wardrobe and how the results you were getting were a lot better than results you were getting from Google. And apparently you weren't the only one who felt that way because we also learned that inside Google...

Chat GPT is causing a lot of chaos. So my colleagues at The Times, Nico Grant and Cade Metz, talked to a bunch of people inside Google and reported on a story on December 21st that Google's management had declared a code red that was essentially the corporate equivalent of like pulling the fire alarm over chat GPT, that there were worries among

very high-ranking Google executives, that ChatGPT could in fact take a bite out of Google's extremely profitable, extremely well-entrenched search business and had basically redirected a ton of engineers and product people to trying to implement some

kind of competitor to chat GPT as quickly as possible, which I just thought, what an amazing thing. I mean, Google, one of the most stable internet businesses of all time, one of the most profitable. Google search is just this kind of unassailable monopoly of just cash printing and has been for so long. And

And here comes OpenAI and this ChatGPT thing. And a couple weeks after this thing goes public, Google is pulling the fire alarm. Yeah, I mean, so, you know, I was talking to Google people and they tend to talk about ChatGPT sort of dismissively, right? Like they like to call it a demo.

And yet here along came this demo, and next thing you know, they've got a Code Red, which, by the way, I've tried to look into what it means to declare a Code Red inside a tech company. My familiarity with Code Red is mostly from the classic film A Few Good Men. Mine is from the Mountain Dew variety. Yeah.

Within you, there are two code reds. But it does seem like the company is trying to figure this out. And of course, I can't wait to see what they're going to do. Look, we know that they have a large language model of their own. We know they're very impressed by it. And they have talked about it nonstop for years. But they have a lot of really tricky issues to work out with how to release it to the public.

And so this is a really interesting one for me because it's a rare case where the issue is much less about the technology, I think, because I think both sides sort of have a good and working thing. And it's much more about what kind of products do you build? What are the user interfaces? What are the safety measures that you put into place? And what's the business model? And those are questions that Google has not had to ask itself in a serious way, in an existential way for a really long time.

Right, it's just kind of taken for granted that there's this search machine that is just going to keep printing cash quarter after quarter after quarter.

you know, billions of dollars a quarter that it just doesn't really have to work for all that hard because it's Google. Because when you want to learn something, you go to Google because Google is the verb that has taken root in our culture as like the thing that means to search for something. It is so much more entrenched than like TikTok or Facebook or even any of these other apps that just seem kind of untouchable. Google is kind of bedrock.

in the tech world. And so it's really interesting to see how quickly they have gone from kind of dismissing this thing to now panicking over it. Yeah, well, and look, I'm somebody who has been really critical of Google search in recent years because I feel like they have come to take their users' presence for granted, right? You know, we've talked about how often when you search for something on Google, you don't really get back an answer. You get a research project,

- You have to search Reddit. You have to search on Google, say Reddit, and then whatever you wanna find, if you wanna find an actual answer that's written by a human. And it's been that way for years. It's totally maddening. - There's this whole industry of search engine optimizers whose job it is essentially to ruin Google search results and just fill them up with sponsored crap, right?

So what the OpenAI folks have shown with ChatGPT is that a different way is possible. That even though the search results that you're getting from ChatGPT are riddled with errors, they can provide some offensive stuff, and they do result on just mulching a lot of labor from writers and journalists into this undifferentiated pablum of sentences,

it's still very useful and it can be very entertaining. And so I think this is a case where the genie is out of the bottle a little bit and now we have to see who's going to capitalize. Totally. And I have a couple of things to say about this. One is what an amazing strategic move by Microsoft. I mean, years ago to make this investment, I think their billion dollar investment in open AI is going to go down as one of the greatest technology investments of all time. I think it goes Google buying YouTube and

Facebook buying Instagram, OpenAI,

investment by Microsoft. Like, I just think if this makes Bing a legitimate competitor to Google, it will be such a huge deal to Microsoft's future that it's going to make their initial investment look so smart. And let me just put a couple of numbers on that from the information story. So Bing, which we all sort of laugh about as a search engine, despite being a sort of also ran in the search market, made $11 billion last year. Or rather, we should say Microsoft's

ad business for which being accounts for the majority made $11 billion last year. That's not bad. That's not nothing. Twitter's revenue in 2021, about 5 billion. Okay. Google makes 10 times that. Wait, Bing is twice as big as Twitter? I almost fell off my chair when I read this, but yes, that's correct.

Wow. So then you have Google, which is making about 10 times what Bing is making in search results, right? So if Satya Nadella, the CEO of Microsoft, can take Bing from like $11 billion to $50 billion over the next few years, you're absolutely right. I think we will already look back at him as like a generationally talented CEO, but this, man, this could really cement his legacy. Totally. My other thing that I'm wondering about is cost here, because something that I heard from folks who, you know, who...

sort of understand search and large language models and ChatGPT. ChatGPT is not free to run, right? Every query that you run it, it's been estimated it costs like a cent or two in just computing power. You know, you have to pay for it

basically this huge, you know, machine running on these giant supercomputers. And so people who, you know, are close to Google were sort of poo-pooing ChatGPT and saying, like, we could never do something like that because I think Google processes something like eight and a half billion queries a day.

And so if you had to sort of ask a large language model like a chat GPT, every time you ran a query on Google, like that would add up very quickly. You'd be spending millions of dollars a day just for the processing power to run the large language model in the background. So I'm very curious how Microsoft is going to scale this, whether it really is going to cost them a cent or two every time someone searches on Bing, because that could get expensive really quickly.

Yeah. And so the question becomes, well, how do you make money from a search engine like this? Search is a really good business because so often people are essentially telling you what they want to buy, right? There's, you know, you're Googling hotels and flights and cars and clothes. And there are all sorts of ways that you can just sort of stick an ad in there. And then you wind up making a ton of money when that person converts into a sale.

ChatGPT, I think, does offer a lot of similar promise. When I say, hey, what kind of shoes should I have in my wardrobe? Instead of just saying, well, here are the 10 kinds of shoes, there's no reason ChatGPT couldn't say, and here's where to buy them, and here's some images of those shoes, right? And here's the ones that are on sale right now. So I think the question is,

will chat GPT-like search results be so much better that they convert better and the resulting sales essentially offset the increased computing costs, at least in the short term? And then over the long term, does Moore's Law kick in and this stuff just basically becomes as cheap as Google search over the next five to 10 years? Right. I mean, that's the bet that I would be making if I were Google is like, yes, it costs a cent or two to...

do a query on ChatGPT now, but that's not going to stay that way forever. I do think there's an interesting sort of conundrum in here. There was someone quoted in the Times story that I thought was really interesting and made an interesting point. It was a former Google employee who now runs a startup. And

And they said that actually that plugging something like ChatGPT into a search engine like Google could actually hurt the business of ads. They said, quote, if Google gives you the perfect answer to each query, you won't click on any ads. So basically saying like if your shoe query does, you know, does come back with the perfect set of shoes, why would you need to click on ads?

because you'll have the answer right there and you can go look for it yourself. Like, is there something that that person is missing about the relationship between the quality of the search result and how likely you are to click on an ad? Well, a huge part of Google's ad business is putting their ads on websites, right? You know, so Google is sort of synonymous with the web because it funds so much of the web. I think the real issue here is that if ChatGPT spills

spares you from having to browse the web, then yes, that is a huge impact on their business, right? And I think it's also gonna just frankly trigger regulatory concerns. So this is probably a good time to talk about the fact that over the years, Google has routinely gotten in trouble for doing stuff that I just don't think is that big a deal. For example, they will show you like a snippet

of a news story in Google News along with a headline, and they had to stop doing this in Spain. Google News pulled out of Spain for years because it was illegal to show tiny snippets of text from these websites without paying a licensing fee, right? Imagine what regulators are going to say around the world when Google says, we took the entire web, we put it into a blender, and we trained a large language model on it, and we will now serve you

The entire knowledge of humanity with no links back to the source material. Google will be like under a raid, right? Like they will try to shut the company down if it does that. And so I think it's in a really precarious position. Now, right now, I think regulators for the most part have not heard of chat GPT. So this probably isn't on their radar. Except for the ones who listen to Hard Fork. Shout out. And by the way, you're the best regulators in the entire world.

Let us know if you want to come on the show. But this really is going to be, I think, one of the next turns of the screw is when people saying, hey, wait a minute. What is the actual source material for all this stuff? Why aren't you crediting any of the sources? Why aren't any of the people who contributed their labor to this being compensated for it? Right. And you can just sort of imagine a sort of big regulatory crackdown coming that tries to stop this stuff from taking the next steps.

Yeah, I think that is possible. I think it's going to take at least a decade. We're still catching up to the last big wave of technology. But I do think this is a really interesting time at Google, which is sort of

navigating all of this, plus these larger sort of macro trends we've been talking about, the, you know, interest rates and cost cutting and the advertising slowdown. So I think this is, in general, like one of the things that I'm going to be looking at this year as one of the emerging rivalries in tech is between Google and Microsoft, who have competed in various ways over the years, but never when it comes to, you know, core search. Bing has never, I would guess, kept

many Google executives up at night worried about the future of their own search product. And maybe now they will. I think this is absolutely going to be one of the most delicious stories of the year. And I think you might see Google search change more in like the next two years than it has in the past 10. And frankly, I think that'll be good for us. Oh my God, I can't believe like it's...

It needs a refresh. And if this is the kick in the pants that gives them the desire and the resources to make Google search better somehow, like I am all for it. So we approve of the code red. Yes. All right. Mountain Dew variety and Google. But I do think one more thing I'll say on this is I do understand the position that Google, you know, some folks inside Google have taken, which is we can't.

deploy this safely. So we're not going to do it yet. We're going to keep it internal. We're going to keep testing it. I do think that OpenAI as a startup has more leeway to put something out there that isn't perfect and can be misused because, you know, they're not under regulatory scrutiny by every agency in the world. They're not, you know, a trillion dollar internet company. They have an investment from one in Microsoft, but they're not

under the same level of scrutiny as Google. And so I understand and appreciate the position that Google is in. It built this stuff. It came up with the technology that powers large language models. Google is the T in GPT. Yeah, they invented the transformer. And yet they have been like lapped by these...

smaller outfits like OpenAI who just come in, take this code, make their own versions of it, and then release it to the public and don't have to spend a lot of time sort of dealing with regulators and politicians yet, although that could happen. So I understand why they're moving slowly, but I think this is a moment where they either need to start making moves to improve Google search or risk

getting left in the dust. - I think Google has benefited enormously over the past half a decade or so from being a generally cautious company, but I do think it's moving into a mode where it's probably gonna have to take on some more risk. - One other thing that's sort of incredible to me about this story is that ChatGPT, this thing that is now reportedly being built into Bing,

still has no idea whether the stuff it's saying is true or not. Like that feels like a pretty big liability for me if I'm Microsoft and I'm looking at this. Like you can get good search results from ChatGPT, but you can also get horrible search results from ChatGPT. So how do you think it's going to navigate that?

Like, is it gonna put a caveat on all the search results saying this may or may not be a hallucination of our AI language model? Like, how do they deal with the fact that these products still sometimes spew out stuff that is just totally wrong? - It's the right question, and this is one where I think that we're all just gonna have to undergo a societal evolution where we understand that we're using these tools that might not always be right. I remember growing up and being told by professors not to rely on Wikipedia because it couldn't always be trusted.

And what did we do? Did we stop using Wikipedia? No, we used it even more. We just sort of understood that we were probably going to need a second and third source before we put anything into a paper that we were writing. I think you're going to see something happen similar with GPT, right? Where it is a starting point for a lot of people. It's like me with our now overused example about buying shoes. It's like, I might look up a second source,

But it gave me a very good start. And now I can sort of take that and take the next steps much more easily. And so I think if we see these things more as a first step rather than a final step, we'll probably be able to make great use of them. Totally. We'll be right back.

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Christine, have you ever bought something and thought, wow, this product actually made my life better? Totally. And usually I find those products through Wirecutter. Yeah, but you work here. We both do. We're the hosts of The Wirecutter Show from The New York Times. It's our job to research, test, and vet products and then recommend our favorites. We'll talk to members of our team of 140 journalists to bring you the very best product recommendations in every category that will actually make your life better. The Wirecutter Show, available wherever you get podcasts.

So, Kevin, you mentioned something to me the other day that I need to hear everything about. You have begun putting your phone into some sort of box.

Yeah. So this is part of my New Year's resolution, uh, 2023. I am going into therapy with my phone. We are going to couples counseling, me and my phone. And I feel like not for the first time. No, no, no, no. I have a long, you know, we have a long and tortured relationship, me and this phone. Um, so a couple of years ago I did a, uh,

a phone detox, like a 30-day program that was meant to separate me from my phone, which worked pretty well. Then COVID happened. Then I had a baby. Then I had all this time where I was just sitting around like feeding bottles and stuff. And so my phone use started to creep back up. And, you know, I'm not very happy about that. So...

Yeah. Enter the box. You know, I don't want to say too much about this particular box because I just started using it. And honestly, I'm not sure if I like it or not, but it is a box. It's called Aro. It has some chargers in there, like little slots. You can put like four phones in there.

So I put my phone in there and it has like a sensor on it. So when I put my phone in, it like starts a timer and it's like basically in phone jail. And then when you take it out, it sort of congratulates you and said like, hey, you know, you got an hour of your life back.

or something like that. Wait, when you say it congratulates you, is there like a voice that comes out of the box? No, there's like a push notification on your phone. It connects via Bluetooth. But you can't read it because your phone is in the box. Well, you take your phone out and it says, you know, you successfully put down your phone for three hours, you miserable...

I guess that's a victory. Feel good about that if you want. So one thing that really hurt my phone use over the pandemic was that I started sleeping with my phone in my bedroom again. And like every expert in this field will tell you like that is the single worst thing you can do. Cause like you reach for your phone,

You know, you get the light in your eyes, it's over. You're not going back to sleep. So that definitely happened to me. So part of this is, you know, the box, it's in my kitchen. It's not in my bedroom. So I put my phone to bed, put my AirPods to bed, and I go to bed. Right. Okay. Backing up then. So one time of the day that you use the boxes at night. Are there other times during the day when the phone goes in the box? Yeah.

Yes. Like, you know, doing dinner with the family. I'll put my phone in the box. Yeah.

I will say you can still hear it buzzing from inside the box. So there's a little bit of like, I need to figure out how to deal with that. But it has been good so far. I'm horrible. Like I'm not a good user of this box yet, but I'm getting there. I also installed, have you heard of OneSec? No, I have not. So I'll show you this. It's cool. It's like a little app.

This is not sponsored content. In fact, I bought a lifetime subscription yesterday. So if I try to go to, say, Instagram on my phone, I get a little thing. Wow. It's just like a sort of a takeover of your screen just happened, and this app just said it's time to take a breath. So it basically puts like a five or ten second pause on,

in between when you open an app. And now you can see it says four attempts to open Instagram within the last 24 hours. I did just install this last night. And then you can choose, like, I don't want to open Instagram or continue to Instagram. So it sort of just puts a little speed bump in between you and your problem apps. It's like you have to ask the principal if it's okay to leave class early. Yeah.

And the principal says, well, this is the fourth escaped attempt you've made, but we'll allow it this time. It'll still let you. The thing I like about it is it's not like a hardened... I've used these blockers before where it's like, do not let me open Twitter for the next 12 hours, which is kind of a brute force method. What I like about this is you can still get there. It's just kind of annoying, and it takes a little while, and it kind of like makes you only do it when you really want to use the app rather than just like

sort of habit. It forces you to be more intentional about the way that you use these things. Exactly. Okay, so now that your phone is in a box and when it's out of the box, it's telling you not to use all the apps on your phone. What has been the effect of this on your life so far?

It's just complicated it a lot. Like, it just means that I spend a lot of time pretending to do deep breathing, waiting for my thing to go away so I can open Instagram. Is it phone time yet, Box? Mo Box, when may I open you? I do feel a little bit like I'm, you know, the hamster in the cage just flicking at the lever to, like, get another treat. It makes the addiction dynamic so much clearer. I mean, this is...

Such an interesting story to me because I know there are so many people out there who have such a tortured relationship with their phone, with the apps on their phone. They know that they need it in their life, but they don't like the way they're using it. They wish they used it less. They wish they had deleted some of the apps on it. And yet it has like never once occurred to me to take any of the steps that you're taking.

You're not like a, you're not a screen time warrior? You know, I think I was before the pandemic. And then I think the pandemic happened and I thought the debate is over and screen time is won. Like the screen is the only thing that is tethering me to human connection right now. And so I'm just going to sort of lean into the moment that I'm in. And it is like a virtual metaphor.

moment, baby. You are merging with the screen. I'm like ready to go full on bionic. I want just like a ticker of mastodon posts like going through my mind at all times. Wow. So I

I do think that something happened during COVID where it was like, it was basically futile and useless to try to lower our screen time because like, what else were we going to do? But I do think now that life has stabilized a little bit, I think actually what tipped me over toward being worried again about myself was having a kid, honestly, and like watching the way, you know, my kid's too young to use a phone, but someday he will. And already he's like obsessive.

Obsessed with it like we'll crawl across the room to get to the phone because he sees me staring at it all the time So that's where I'm like, I don't actually like how much I'm using my phone. I'm trying to be much more intentional about it I'm not going cold turkey. I'm not doing anything I'm not getting one of those like dumb phones that they sell now for like hardcore People but I am trying to be more intentional putting in these little speed bumps and this box I don't know if it's gonna stick

But I'm trying it. There is something really almost chilling about looking into the eyes of a baby that is looking at a screen. You know, where they go from sort of infinitely distractible and sometimes irritable or sometimes really engaged with you. And then they just see the flicker of a screen and they become hypnotized. It doesn't even matter what's on the screen. It's something about the glow of the pixels. And they're just completely transfixed.

So I can understand having a kid and thinking, you know, I want to change my relationship with this thing. You know, I think a question that I have is like, is the phone really the problem? Like, are you solving at the level of the problem here? Or is the real issue like maybe something a little bit higher level about like, well, why are you

opening Instagram 30 times a day. The void in my soul. Is that the real problem? I'm trying to figure out a way to have this conversation without making you do therapy live on the podcast. But like, you know, I mean, look, you know, I have been sort of gently laughing at this whole situation the whole time. But look,

the truth is I have also had to come up with my own more intentional relationship to certain of the apps that I use at various points in my life. You know, the gay hookup apps like the grinder, man, did I have to work on my relationship with that. And there were times when I'd finally delete that thing from my phone and it was like I had finally shut Pandora's box, you know? So I very much sympathize with this idea that sometimes, you know, depending on the app and depending on your personality, you just will not be able to pull yourself away from it. And

At the same time, again, I wonder, it's like, well, is the app really the issue here? You know, is there maybe just something else going on with you? And the reason I think that's important is because it goes to the question of, like, is this box actually going to work for you or not in the long run? Totally. And I think, you know, I like that there are technologists out there who are trying to use technology to solve a technological problem, right? That we have these, like, limiting apps, these, you know, speed bump apps, these

boxes that have Bluetooth and send you push alerts and basically gamify the process of like

like getting off your phone. I appreciate, and I think that's a worthy space for innovation. I also just, I think you're probably right that there's some problems that technology can't solve, and this may be one of them. So I'm going to look deep within myself, and I'm going to continue to try to use this box until it tells me I'm doing a good job because I am a hamster in a cage. Well, if nothing else, putting your phone in a box does seem like a good way to keep TikTok from spying on you. But, you know, I think...

Because this is a technology podcast and we do need to keep up on the trends, my commitment to you and the listeners is that I'm actually going to use my phone more this year. That's my big resolution is I am going to – here's the thing. The more time I spend on the internet, the better my life gets. I wish I could tell you that spending all day reading Mastodon posts has left me an invalid. But no, things are going great. Wow. You are just a cybernetic citizen of the future. Yeah.

No, I want to be clear that I am not anti-phone. One of the things that my phone detox coach helped me with a few years ago, this woman named Catherine Price, who's amazing. Shout out, Catherine. Real thing, by the way, you did have a coach. There was a process you went through. Oh, yeah. Total process. She has a 30-day program. She put me through it, and it was life-changing. It was great.

genuinely like made all my relationships better like really gave me time back I was much more productive so I really think there's like a benefit in not getting off your phone but in resetting your relationship with it I think that's just a healthy thing to do I think for me I

I have to make sure that I am still in the driver's seat of that relationship, right? That my phone is working for me and not the other way around because it is so easy to just let the phone become the boss. Yep. And you know what? In 2023, we want you to be your own damn boss. You put that phone in the box and you say, I got this phone. Yeah. So my phone is right now not in a box, but it's going to go back in a box as soon as I get home. And if you're trying to reach me,

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That's it for this week. Hard Fork is produced by Davis Land. We're edited by Paula Schumann. This episode was fact-checked by Caitlin Love. Today's show was engineered by Alyssa Moxley. Original music by Dan Powell, Alicia Bietube, Marion Lozano, and Rowan Nemisto. Special thanks to Hannah Ingber, Nell Gologly, Kate Lepresti, and Jeffrey Miranda. As always, you can email us at hardfork at nytimes.com. That's all for this week. See you next time. ♪