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summaries

Will Shanklin
Product Reviews

Wikipedia cancels plan to test AI summaries after editors skewer the idea

by admin June 16, 2025


Wikipedia is backing off a plan to test AI article summaries. Earlier this month, the platform announced plans to trial the feature for about 10 percent of mobile web visitors. To say they weren’t well-received by editors would be an understatement. The Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) then changed plans and cancelled the test.

The AI summaries would have appeared at the top of articles for 10 percent of mobile users. Readers would have had to opt in to see them. The AI-generated summaries only appeared “on a set of articles” for the two-week trial period.

Editor comments in the WMF’s announcement (via 404 Media) ranged from “Yuck” to “Grinning with horror.” One editor wrote, “Just because Google has rolled out its AI summaries doesn’t mean we need to one-up them. I sincerely beg you not to test this, on mobile or anywhere else. This would do immediate and irreversible harm to our readers and to our reputation as a decently trustworthy and serious source.”

“Wikipedia has in some ways become a byword for sober boringness, which is excellent,” the editor continued. “Let’s not insult our readers’ intelligence and join the stampede to roll out flashy AI summaries.”

This screenshot from 404 Media shows another version of an AI-generated summary on a Wikipedia page. The planned test would have only showed up on the mobile web version of the site. (Wikimedia Foundation)

Editors’ gripes weren’t limited to the idea. They also criticized the nonprofit for excluding them from the planning phase. “You also say this has been ‘discussed,’ which is thoroughly laughable as the ‘discussion’ you link to has exactly one participant, the original poster, who is another WMF employee,” an editor wrote.

A Wikimedia Foundation spokesperson shared the following statement with Engadget:

“The Wikimedia Foundation has been exploring ways to make Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects more accessible to readers globally. This two-week, opt-in experiment was focused on making complex Wikipedia articles more accessible to people with different reading levels. For the purposes of this experiment, the summaries were generated by an open-weight Aya model by Cohere. It was meant to gauge interest in a feature like this, and to help us think about the right kind of community moderation systems to ensure humans remain central to deciding what information is shown on Wikipedia.

For these experiments, our usual process includes discussing with volunteers (who create and curate all the information on Wikipedia) to make decisions on whether and how to proceed with building features. The discussion around this feature is an example of this process, where we built out a prototype of an idea and reached out to the Wikipedia volunteer community for their thoughts.

It is common to receive a variety of feedback from volunteers, and we incorporate it in our decisions, and sometimes change course. We welcome such thoughtful feedback — this is what continues to make Wikipedia a truly collaborative platform of human knowledge.

As shared in our latest post on the community discussion page, we do not have any plans to continue the experiment at the moment, as we continue to assess and discuss the feedback we have already received from volunteers.”In the “discussion” page, the organization explained that it wanted to cater to its audience’s needs. “Many readers need some simplified text in addition to the main content,” a WMF employee wrote. “In previous research, we heard that readers wanted to have an option to get a quick overview of a topic prior to jumping into reading the full article.”

The organization didn’t rule out future uses of AI. But they said editors won’t be left in the dark next time. “Bringing generative AI into the Wikipedia reading experience is a serious set of decisions, with important implications, and we intend to treat it as such,” the spokesperson told 404 Media. “We do not have any plans for bringing a summary feature to the wikis without editor involvement.”

Update, June 13, 2025, 12:52PM ET: This story has been corrected to note that Wikipedia never actually started its AI summary test. The plan was announced, but cancelled before it took place. A statement from the Wikimedia Foundation has also been added, and the headline has been updated as well.



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June 16, 2025 0 comments
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Google is experimenting with AI-generated podcast-like audio summaries at the top of its search results

by admin June 15, 2025



Google just launched its most impressive (and unsettling) addition to AI Overview yet, a new feature called “Audio Overview” that generates audio summaries of search results, narrated in the style of two life-like, yet not quite human podcast hosts.

Audio Overview is currently an opt-in Search Labs feature, meaning you won’t see the option for it unless you toggle a switch in Search Labs. Right now it’s only available in the U.S. and only generates English summaries.

I tried out Audio Overview myself and the results weren’t exactly what I was expecting.


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After you activate the feature in Search Labs, some Google searches will include an Audio Overview box, usually below the regular AI Overview and “People also ask” sections. You just tap the button to generate the audio summary and wait for it to finish processing.

(Image credit: Google)

The audio clip you’ll get is generated on the spot, so if you refresh the page and generate it again, it could end up being different. The summaries I generated ranged from 3 to 5 minutes long. All of them feature the same pair of AI-generated voices who go back and forth discussing whatever topic you searched, in the style of a podcast.

The voices are admittedly significantly more lifelike than the robotic Siri sound I was expecting. There’s tone changes, conversational word choices, seemingly natural language. It’s not quite realistic, though. The two voices are like a pair of podcasters with zero rapport who seem like they’re reading off a teleprompter. It’s just shy of being lifelike but still lifelike enough that some people could be fooled at first.

Google shows you which search results it used to generate the audio summary, so you can double-check whatever info your AI podcasters give you. However, they sound realistic enough that some people might just assume these are real people and take whatever they say as fact. Of course, that’s also an issue with text AI summaries.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

There are some hiccups that give away that these aren’t real people. For instance, in one of the summaries I got, one of the AI voices asks a question then immediately answers it herself, which sounded pretty awkward.

Both voices use emotional language from time to time, like exclaiming “Wow!” at a fun fact, but it definitely sounds stiff and just shy of something a real person would say. The AI voices also mispronounce words once in a while, like “musk” instead of “must.”

Uncanny and eerie as this feature is, I can see it being helpful to some people, especially those who may have vision impairments, or otherwise rely on screen reading tools. The AI-generated voices sound pretty good for the fact that they’re AI, too.

That would be cool if it didn’t come with a host of concerns around the spread of misinformation through AI and the threat AI-generated voices like this could pose to jobs like voice acting. Like any innovation in AI, Google’s Audio Overviews are a double-edged sword and unfortunately I’m still more skeptical than impressed.



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June 15, 2025 0 comments
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