

Google’s AI-powered search engine sparked online buzz after unexpectedly responding to users searching the word ‘disregard.’ The unusual interaction raised fresh questions about AI search reliability and conversational search technology. Google has already rolled out AI Mode, which is an advanced search experience users can switch to for more conversational interactions.
Google Search experienced a significant glitch on May 22, 2026. Users who searched for the word ‘disregard’ met with an unexpected AI chatbot response. It stated, "Understood. I have disregarded your previous prompt. How can I help you today?"
The apparent glitch occurred when users searched a variety of command words, including ‘disregard,’ ‘ignore,’ ‘dismiss,’ ‘stop,’ and ‘start.’ Instead of presenting Google's traditional list of blue links, the search engine responded as though users had issued instructions to an AI assistant. Google hasn’t acknowledged the issue officially, but it may already be fixing it.
The incident coincided with major changes to Google's search platform. On May 19, Google announced several updates to its search bar, claiming this was the biggest update to the platform in more than 25 years.
The malfunction proved particularly frustrating for users seeking genuine information about the word itself. Although the Merriam-Webster link remained available, users had to scroll past a huge block of space to find it, with the AI response serving no conceivable value to someone searching the word "disregard", according to TechCrunch.
Also Read: How to Use Google AI Agents for Smarter Search Results: Step-by-Step Guide
The glitch revealed a fundamental problem with Google's rapid shift toward AI-powered search. The disregard bug is a specific symptom of a much larger transformation that Google has been building toward since it launched its AI Overviews feature in May 2024.
Google announced at its I/O 2026 developer conference that it is officially ending the era of the ten blue links and replacing them with AI-first search results, conversational queries, and information agents that browse the web on your behalf.
The company emphasised that the glitch is unrelated to the major AI updates announced at Google I/O on May 19.