
Audio By Carbonatix
Google has released a new feature which will allow people to search the internet by taking a video.
Video search will let people point their camera at something, ask a question about it, and get search results.
Android and iPhone users globally will gain access to the feature from 1700 GMT by enabling "AI Overviews" in their Google app, but it will only support English at launch.
It is the latest move from the tech giant to change how people search online by utilising artificial intelligence (AI).
It comes three months after ChatGPT-maker OpenAI announced it was trialling the ability to search by asking its chatbot questions.
Google introduced AI-generated results at the top of certain search queries this year, with mixed results.
In May, the feature drew criticism for providing erratic, inaccurate answers, which included advising people to make cheese stick to pizza by using "non-toxic glue".
At the time, a Google spokesperson said the issues were "isolated examples". The results have since become better, with fewer inaccuracies.
Since then, there have been further moves to include AI in search, which included the ability to ask questions about still images using Google Lens.
The firm said this feature has increased the popularity of Lens, within its mobile app, which has motivated it to expand the feature further.

Hooked on video
Google's head of search Liz Reid said the new capability would let people ask questions about the world around them more easily.
She gave the example of a person at an aquarium, who might want to find out why a group of fish are swimming in unison.
Instead of having to search for the fish online and write out the query, the new feature will let them point their camera, record a short clip and ask a question out loud.
Google's AI will analyse the video, identify the fish, combine that with the question and produce search results.
Industry analyst Paolo Pescatore said this was a "big thing" for Google.
"We are now seeing AI in everything and people connect best with visuals," he said.
"This latest development further demonstrates new ways of bringing content to life with something like search which is one of the most common tasks carried out on the internet.
"Here lies scope for AI to be truly collaborative and an innovator in everyday life - we are on the brink of AI becoming personalised and unique based upon our usage patterns and habits."
Other ways to search
As well as introducing a way to search by video, Google has also released several other updates.
It says it has improved its shopping results, which will now incorporate reviews and pricing information from different sellers.
And it is also introducing a competitor to the music-identifying app Shazam, which is owned by Apple.
The rival tool, accessible through Circle to Search on an Android device, will let people identify songs from a website they're on or a show they're streaming without leaving the app.
Google's new features come as it faces growing challengers in the search space, where it is estimated to have cornered more than 90% of the market globally.
This includes OpenAI, which revealed in July it was trialling a search feature within ChatGPT.
SearchGPT lets people search the internet by asking questions to a chatbot, and it is being tested by a limited number of users in the US.
OpenAI's value surged to $157bn (£120bn) on Wednesday after it raised $6.6bn in its latest funding round from high-profile investors including Microsoft.
Google's new announcements are likely a way to combat the growth of rival firms - though none are yet to truly threaten its massive dominance.
Latest Stories
-
Blame inefficiencies; tariff hike not solution – GUTA
5 minutes -
Cabinet directs Attorney-General to draft bill protecting state assets from arbitrary disposal
13 minutes -
What exactly is driving rising utility tariffs? – Minority questions economic gains
38 minutes -
Current economic conditions do not justify tariff increases — GUTA President
47 minutes -
GTF Elective Congress: Frederick Lartey pledges revolution for grassroots development
57 minutes -
CSOs call for collaboration to advance tobacco taxation
1 hour -
Five Central University students remanded over alleged cannabis-infused products
1 hour -
NACOC launches nationwide anti-drug campaign targeting school campuses
1 hour -
Minority demands full disclosure on PURC tariff increases, cites economic contradictions
1 hour -
Editor of Herald Newspaper Larry Dogbey jailed 7 days for contempt
1 hour -
Minority criticises latest utility tariff hike, calls increases “broken promise”
2 hours -
Fifty 50 Club commissions maternal and child health centre in Kyekyewere-Dadwen
2 hours -
‘My late father would be gutted and disappointed’—Kwadwo Safo Jnr reacts to Kwabenya incident
2 hours -
Prudential Bank goes ‘Prevention First’ with free health screening for staff
2 hours -
Ireland considers health-led approach as committee pushes for drug possession decriminalisation
2 hours