AI Trends At All-time High on Google but Bitcoin Still Did It Better
Global search interest for the term âAIâ has reached a new all-time high on Google, though itâs yet to hold a candle to Bitcoin (BTC) peak mania in 2017, data has revealed.
Artificial intelligence has dominated headlines over the past few months, with some suggesting that itâs the latest âtech fadâ after crypto and the Metaverse.
Most recently, OpenAI executives warned in a May 23 blog post that within the next ten years, AI will exceed expert skill level in âmost domainsâ and be as productive as âone of todayâs largest corporations.â
However while global and United States search interest for AI has reached a fever pitch â clocking in at 89 on Google Trends, it is still shy of Bitcoinâs peak search interest of 100 in December 2017 when Bitcoin was nearing its then-high of $20,000.
Comparing search trends for buzz words, "AI, "metaverse," and "Bitcoin" over a ten-year-period in the United States. Source: Google Trends
Mark Schilsky, an Alliance Bernstein technology specialist noted on May 31 that AI was âstill far below the absolute hype of Bitcoin,â according to a report from Business Insider. His analysis was specifically focused on U.S. search trends.Â
Schilisky compared the three âbuzziest segments of the tech industryâ over the past ten years, âAIâ, âmetaverseâ, and Bitcoin,â to reveal that the peak of search volume for âBitcoinâ is higher than the peak of search volume for AI so far.
China says Bitcoin who?Â
The results, however, vastly differ in China, where cryptocurrency is banned and Google search is restricted. The country favors Baidu as its search engine.
According to Google Trends, Chinaâs Google users have consistently had more search interest for AI compared to Bitcoin on a monthly basis since May 2013.
Comparing search trends for buzz words "AI," "metaverse," and "Bitcoin" in China. Source: Google Trends
Throughout the last decade, there were only three instances in which Bitcoin surpassed AI searches in China, which line up with significant Bitcoin-related events.
In November 2013, Bitcoin surpassed AI as a search time in China for the first time, coinciding with it reaching its highest-ever level of $300 on the now-defunct cryptocurrency exchange Mt. Gox.
In December 2017, Bitcoin once again took the lead in search interest, which was when Bitcoin hit all-time highs of $17,249.92 at the time.
The third and most recent occurrence took place in February 2021, as Bitcoin soared above $43,000 following the news that Tesla had bought $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin, and its decision to start accepting Bitcoin payments.
The country banned cryptocurrencies in 2021, and shortly after it was reported by Cointelegraphâs staff in China that online searches for several major cryptocurrency exchanges were returning zero results.
Meanwhile, China has seen searches for âAIâ hit their all-time high of 100 in April 2023. Today, the search score is around 94.
In May, Flytek, a state-sponsored Chinese AI company, announced it is launching âSpark Modelâ an AI system designed to compete directly with OpenAIâs ChatGPT.
Chinese officials recently discussed the need for âdedicated efforts to safeguard political security and improve the security governance of internet data and artificial intelligence,â during a meeting on May 30. According to a local media outlet it was stated:
 âWe must be prepared for worst-case and extreme scenarios and be ready to withstand the major test of high winds, choppy waters and even dangerous storms.â Â