The new traffic war: how ChatGPT, Gemini and Perplexity are redistributing brand authority
Unprecedented analysis of 4.2M queries in Portuguese and Spanish shows 68% of generated answers ignore Google's top 10 results.
The stories with the most traction across generative engines right now — updated in real time.
Unprecedented analysis of 4.2M queries in Portuguese and Spanish shows 68% of generated answers ignore Google's top 10 results.
For two decades, search visibility was an engineering problem.
The debate about whether AI search will become mainstream ended sometime in early 2026.
For twenty years, SEO operated in channels.
In April 2026, two of the world's largest enterprises made moves that signaled a structural shift in how companies approach AI search visibility.
For two years, Generative Engine Optimization has been discussed in the abstract.
When Adobe launched LLM Optimizer in October 2025, the company did something unusual.
For two decades, digital marketers optimized for a single algorithm: Google's PageRank-derived ranking system.
For two years, Generative Engine Optimization operated on hunches.
For months, the Generative Engine Optimization conversation lived in blog posts, LinkedIn debates, and Twitter threads.
*Category: Industry, Publishers, and Commercial Response*
For two years, Generative Engine Optimization existed in a strange limbo: everyone agreed it mattered, but almost nobody could prove it.
For two decades, the dominant theory of search visibility went like this: if enough authoritative websites link to you, Google will trust you, and users will find you.
*The battle for discovery isn't about ranking anymore — it's about being woven into the AI's answer, recommendation, and checkout flow.*
In the nearly two and a half years since a team of researchers at Princeton and Georgia Tech published the first paper on Generative Engine Optimization (GEO), the search marketing world has done…