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aol.com
The drama between a software engineering veteran and Google is ...

Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis (pictured right) pushed back hard against Steve Yegge's claims about Google's internal AI adoption.Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesFormer Googler and software veteran Steve Yegge made a striking claim about the search giant's internal AI adoption.Yegge said there is a big gap in AI usage between the Google DeepMind team and the rest of the company.Google DeepMind's CEO called the claim "absolute nonsense." Other Googlers publicly pushed back too. Yegge doubled down.A former Google engineer has gotten the company's goat.And after receiving rare pushback in public from the tech giant's AI CEO, the computer programming veteran is now doubling down.Steve Yegge, a software engineering veteran who used to work at the company, has faced a public onslaught after claiming last week that a "buddy at Google who's been a tech director there for about 20 years" essentially said that their AI adoption internally was severely lagging.Google's internal AI adoption curve, Yegge wrote last week, is the same "as John Deere, the tractor company.""Most of the industry has the same internal adoption curve: 20% agentic power users, 20% outright refusers, 60% still using Cursor or equivalent chat tool," Yegge wrote on X on April 13. "It turns out Google has this curve too."Business Insider has not independently verified Yegge's claims, which he presented as secondhand. The company did not respond to a request for comment.Externally, Google was viewed as entering 2026 on a winning streak, arguably catching up to OpenAI in the generative AI race and erasing a once-embarrassing gap for the company whose research helped lay the foundation for large language models.Yegge's post sparked a firestorm of public backlash from the company's workers, stretching from some of Google's top rungs down to lower-level engineers.Most notable was Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, who didn't seem to hold much back in attempting to set the record straight."Maybe tell your buddy to do some actual work and to stop spreading absolute nonsense," the Google AI boss wrote in a reply to Yegge's original post. "This post is completely false and just pure clickbait."In response to Hassabis, Yegge wrote that he would apologize for his initial post, "If Google can convince me that half their engineers are burning 4M tokens a day."A week after his initial post on the topic, Yegge doubled down on Monday, writing that he had heard from "Googlers from multiple orgs" who outli...

aol.com
businessinsider.com
Drama Between Software Engineer and Google Heats up

The drama between a software engineering veteran and Google is heating up — and playing out in public By Brent D. Griffiths You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis (pictured right) pushed back hard against Steve Yegge's claims about Google's internal AI adoption. Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images 2026-04-20T23:57:23.562Z Former Googler and software veteran Steve Yegge made a striking claim about the search giant's internal AI adoption. Yegge said there is a big gap in AI usage between the Google DeepMind team and the rest of the company. Google DeepMind's CEO called the claim "absolute nonsense." Other Googlers publicly pushed back too. Yegge doubled down. A former Google engineer has gotten the company's goat. And after receiving rare pushback in public from the tech giant's AI CEO, the computer programming veteran is now doubling down.Steve Yegge, a software engineering veteran who used to work at the company, has faced a public onslaught after claiming last week that a "buddy at Google who's been a tech director there for about 20 years" essentially said that their AI adoption internally was severely lagging.Google's internal AI adoption curve, Yegge wrote last week, is the same "as John Deere, the tractor company.""Most of the industry has the same internal adoption curve: 20% agentic power users, 20% outright refusers, 60% still using Cursor or equivalent chat tool," Yegge wrote on X on April 13. "It turns out Google has this curve too." Business Insider has not independently verified Yegge's claims, which he presented as secondhand. The company did not respond to a request for comment.Externally, Google was viewed as entering 2026 on a winning streak, arguably catching up to OpenAI in the generative AI race and erasing a once-embarrassing gap for the company whose research helped lay the foundation for large language models.Yegge's post sparked a firestorm of public backlash from the company's workers, stretching from some of Google's top rungs down to lower-level engineers.Most notable was Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, who didn't seem to hold much back in attempting to set the record straight.Maybe tell your buddy to do some actual work and to stop spreading absolute nonsense. This post is completely false and just pure clickbait.— Demis Hassabis (@demishassabis) April 14, 2026 "Maybe tell your buddy to do some actual work and to stop spre...

businessinsider.com
startupfortune.com
Google is accelerating its agentic AI push as Anthropic tightens its ...

11 hours ago ... ... Anthropic's Claude models gain enterprise developer loyalty, with both companies racing to become the. ... A company that builds its internal operations around a ...

startupfortune.com
theinformation.com
Google Creates Strike Team to Improve Coding Models

20 hours ago ... The push was prompted in part by Anthropic's recent AI model releases, according to two of the people. Researchers at Google DeepMind view Anthropic's ...

theinformation.com