At present, searches for everything in the world are being conducted by Google, but a growing number of experts believe that Google has reached its peak and will now begin to lose its luster.

In a report published by the German newspaper Welt, Stephan Butlesbacher said that Google's search engine records 200,000 searches in just five seconds and 3.5 billion searches a day.

Some expectations are that Google's success will begin to decline soon, the US investor Robert Lukasquieu said in an interview with the Welt newspaper.

After two decades of success, Google's search engine has come to an end, and the way people are looking for information on the Internet is changing radically - whether it's travel, restaurants, cars, books, cosmetics, and everything you're looking at. About people online.

Google is still dominant
Robert Lukasquieu is the founder of LivePerson, which is programming chat robots and accomplishes these tasks through intelligent encryption that connects users to Web sites in small talk windows.

"In the future people will prefer to handle conversation algorithms instead of Google, especially if they want to know something," says Lukasquieu.

Lucasquieu is not the only one who expects this or sees that the absolute dominance imposed by the Google search engine in the past is beginning to decline.

Google has closed the Google Plus network has created millions of accounts in this network since its launch in 2011 (Reuters)

Users increasingly accept algorithms
Google is the first destination for anyone who wants to learn about the events, celebrities and major sporting events that users around the world often look for.

But the writer believes anyone who wants to buy a purpose from the Internet will probably go to the Amazon site, according to a study by the Gambschut Institute of Market Analysis in California.

In addition, 54% of all product searches are conducted through retail sites, while only 46% are conducted through Google.

On the other hand, the number of news readers has decreased, and people are turning to media outlets or to Facebook for world news.

The writer said that there are increasing numbers of Internet users who know the source of information, in addition to allowing chat robots to communicate with companies without opening an Internet page, which was impossible in the past.

Google's influence began to decline
"This classic site will die, and if the search engine dies, it is very likely that Google will also collapse," Robert Lucasquieu was quoted as saying.

A number of experts also support this view, with two in three young Americans using algorithms to connect with companies, according to surveys conducted by Business Insider.

The writer said that many Internet users today are looking for information from different sources, so Google is no longer the main channel through which data flows.

The search engine seems to be losing its control over the Internet world slowly but visibly, and in the face of the competition represented by other sites such as Facebook and Twitter, Google's monopoly of this world is collapsing.

Many people have lost confidence in Google. It has become known that Google Plus has seen leaks of user data over the past years.

Software developers have been able to preview personal data for users since 2015 without permission, and also have access to names, e-mail addresses, a job, a gender, and anyone's age.

Google discovered the loophole in March and shut it down, but experts are still angry, as data protection chief Johannes Caspar has opened an investigation.

Ads on Google still represent the largest source of revenue for the company and last year the company raised about $ 78 billion (Anatolia)

Confidence is subject to vibration
Google has closed the Google Plus network and has created millions of accounts on the network since it was launched in 2011, and about 500,000 of them appear to have been leaked.

The advertising revenues associated with Google's search results remain the company's largest source of revenue. Last year, the company raised about $ 78 billion, but Larry Page, the head of Google's parent company, Alfabit, is still thinking about new ways to make money.

The company's engineers are working on self-driving cars, optical fiber cables, special spoons to feed people with Parkinson's disease, and US military drones rely on Google's artificial intelligence, with protests inside the company.

It seems that Google's business group is expanding and may lose its original idea. After the idea of ​​a "question, answer, question, answer" was the foundation of success in the early years, Google is now taking a variety of ways, "Google may be Google's first, most popular and popular product, but it does not represent the future."