I have covered Google Last year, AI was reviewed after its dirty rollout, when screenshots of extraordinary wrong answers began to pop up in the upper part of the search results and started going viral on social media. Nevertheless, when I first saw the AI review images confidently saying that the Reddate posts still have 2024, I thought they might be converted into screenshots. I mean, more than a billion Google users currently see AI infield results every month. Certainly, such a clear error is now caught and complicated so far?
I was wrong “Is it 2025” Orally, I got the results of three different AI review, yet each sentence was the same as: “No, it’s not 2025.” Invalid results cited numerous websites, which include admission to Wikipedia in the year 2025, from Reddit’s R/Scouts.
The first time I asked Google Search for year confirmation, AI’s results included a shot in the right date: “This is May 28, 2024.” –
However, my third attempt was so unconscious and was able to disconnect the whole thing:
No, it’s not 2025. The current year is 2024. According to the information provided, for some locations around the world, such as Caribati, New Zealand, and parts of Russia and Australia, it is currently 2025. However, the current date is 29 May 2025 in San Francisco, CA (related to zip code).
Bend! Bend! Everything in this AI review is. Starting with the claim that this is in fact last year. After that, the previous error reaffirms – more detailed – it’s now somewhere in the world and 2025. New Zealand screaming out for some reason. Then, to conclude a Shyamlan-Iski, where it says the original date, which is paired by my home zip code. Although Google possibly knows where I’m waking up, my zip code was hurt by adding AI’s results to AI.
I asked Google about this latest hiccup. “Like all the features of the search, we strictly improve our system and use such examples. The majority of the AI review provides helpful, factual information and we are actively working on a refreshing problem to solve such problems,” Google’s spokesperson and Google’s spokesperson.


