This thread and this article on Search Engine Land [
searchengineland.com...] point to a deeper shift than courtroom drama or click redistribution: the foundational model of how users seek information is changing.
In April, Google reportedly saw a decline in search queries on Apple devices, for the first time. Apple now openly backs AI-first tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity, with plans to embed them into Safari.
Webmasters are seeing organic traffic drop 30–40%, confirmed in other thread here at WebmasterWorld, coinciding with the AI Overviews rollout, which now extract and serve our content directly, with no attribution or clicks.
Google says search is growing, but that claim is at odds with what many publishers see in their traffic dashboards.
So while Google isn’t saying “search is dying,” the combination of AI disruption, changing user habits, and antitrust headwinds means traditional search, at least as a discovery tool for the open web, is under existential pressure.
The next decade might not be about search at all. It may be about answer engines, walled gardens, and trust-driven destinations. If Google is no longer the front door, we all need to figure out what is.
As always, it would be great to hear how others are preparing.