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Google Tests AI-Powered Article Overviews in Google News

Google has quietly begun testing AI-powered article overviews in Google News, an experimental feature designed to generate short story previews using generative AI.Β 

The pilot, announced alongside several other AI updates, is currently rolling out with a limited group of publishers and aims to give readers more context before they click through to full articles.

This experiment sits at the intersection of two ongoing tensions: Google’s push to integrate generative AI deeper into search products, and publishers’ concerns about traffic, attribution, and control.Β 

The way this unfolds could shape how news is consumed in an AI-first internet.

What Are AI-Powered Article Overviews in Google News?

Google describes the feature as β€œAI-powered article overviews”, sometimes labeled as β€œStory previews.” 


Looping GIF
These previews are generated using generative AI and appear directly within Google News, offering readers a concise summary of an article’s key points before clicking through.

According to Google, the goal is simple: to help users get β€œmore context before they click through.”

Unlike traditional snippets pulled directly from an article, these overviews are newly generated summaries, created by AI, and clearly marked with an AI disclaimer at the top. Importantly, Google says this is an experiment, not a full rollout.

The feature is part of what Google calls a β€œnew AI pilot program”, developed in collaboration with publishers rather than deployed unilaterally.

Which Publishers Are Participating in This Experiment?

Google confirmed that it is working with a handful of major global publishers across multiple regions and languages. The initial partners include:

  • Der Spiegel
  • El PaΓ­s
  • Folha de S. Paulo
  • Infobae
  • Kompas
  • The Guardian
  • The Times of India
  • The Washington Examiner
  • The Washington Post

The inclusion of publishers from Europe, Latin America, Asia, and the United States suggests this is not a narrow test. Google appears to be evaluating how AI-generated previews perform across different media ecosystems and audience behaviors.

How Do These AI Article Overviews Appear to Users?

SEO expert Glenn Gabe was among the first to spot the feature live for The Washington Post in Google News. He shared screenshots and a GIF showing how the experience works.

Here is what users see:

  • A visible AI disclaimer at the top labeling the content as an AI-generated story preview
  • A short, readable summary of the article’s key points
  • A prominent link directing users to the full article on the publisher’s website

Gabe noted that the preview allows users to β€œpreview the article before clicking through,” but emphasized that the link to the original story remains clear and direct.

From a design perspective, this matters. Google is clearly trying to avoid the criticism it has faced with AI Overviews in Search, where answers sometimes appear to replace clicks. Here, the AI preview is framed as a gateway, not a substitute.

Why Is Google Introducing AI Story Previews Now?

Google’s announcement comes during a broader wave of AI integration across its products. While most attention has focused on AI Overviews in Search, Gemini updates, and productivity tools, Google News has remained relatively unchanged, until now.

According to Google, this experiment is about enhancing discovery, not reducing publisher visibility.Β 

The company says it is actively working with publishers to test how AI summaries can add value without undermining journalism.

The timing is strategic:

  • News fatigue is real
  • Users skim more than ever
  • Headlines alone often lack nuance
  • Readers want context before committing time

Google appears to believe that short, AI-generated previews can bridge the gap between a headline and a full read.

How Is This Different From AI Overviews in Search?

It is important to separate this Google News experiment from AI Overviews in Google Search, which have drawn criticism for answering questions directly and reducing clicks.

Key differences stand out:

  • Limited rollout: Only select publishers are included
  • Clear labeling: The content is explicitly marked as AI-generated
  • Publisher collaboration: Google says publishers are part of the experiment
  • Click-through emphasis: A prominent link to the full article remains

In other words, Google seems to be taking a more cautious, collaborative approach inside Google News than it initially did in Search.

But caution does not erase risk.

Even with disclaimers and links, AI-generated summaries still reframe journalistic work through a machine’s lens. That reframing, intentional or not can influence interpretation.

What Are the Potential Risks for Publishers?

While Google frames the experiment as beneficial, several concerns are impossible to ignore.

First, traffic impact. If readers feel the preview is sufficient, click-through rates could decline, especially for explanatory or breaking-news stories.

Second, editorial control. AI-generated summaries may emphasize certain angles while omitting others, subtly altering the story’s framing.

Third, trust and attribution. Even with clear links, readers may associate the summary more with Google than with the newsroom that reported the story.

And finally, precedent. Once AI previews become normalized, it may be harder for publishers to opt out later.

What Does This Mean for the Future of Google News?

This pilot suggests Google News may be evolving from a link-based aggregator into a context-providing platform, where AIΒ  and AI SEO plays a larger role in shaping how stories are introduced.

If the experiment expands, we could see:

  • AI previews becoming standard for major publishers
  • Different preview lengths for different story types
  • Publisher controls over AI-generated summaries
  • Metrics tied to preview engagement, not just clicks

But all of that depends on feedback both from publishers and from users.

Google says it is still in the experimental phase, and no broad rollout has been announced.Β 

Key TakeawaysΒ 

  • Google is testing AI-powered article overviews in Google News.
  • The feature generates AI-written story previews for news articles.
  • Aimed at giving readers more context before clicking.
  • Currently limited to a small group of publishers.
  • Partners include The Washington Post, The Guardian, and The Times of India.Β 
  • The experiment raises questions about publisher traffic and control.

 

Dipti Arora

Dipti Arora is a Senior Content Writer with over seven years of experience creating impactful content across Digital Marketing, SEO, technology, and business domains. She has a strong background in managing news verticals and delivering editorial excellence. Dipti has contributed to leading publications such as The Times of India and CEO News, where her research-driven storytelling and ability to simplify complex subjects have consistently stood out. She is passionate about crafting content that informs, engages, and drives meaningful results.

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