Google says 75 percent of code is now generated by AI, reveals what human engineers do

AI is quietly rewriting the rules of software development at Google, and the scale of that change is now out in the open. Inside the company, machines are no longer just helping engineers, they are doing most of the coding work. What used to take teams of developers writing and reviewing every line is now increasingly handled by AI systems working in the background. The human engineers are still involved, but their role is no longer limited to typing code.

“Today, 75 per cent of all new code at Google is now AI-generated and approved by engineers,” said CEO Sundar Pichai, giving a good sense of how deeply AI has entered the company’s core engineering work.

What engineers actually do now at Google?

Just a few months ago, AI was responsible for about half of Google’s code. That figure has now climbed to 75 per cent, showing how fast things are moving inside the company. But the bigger change is not just the number, it is the way engineers now work.

Instead of building everything line by line, developers are assigning tasks to AI agents that can execute them on their own. Multiple agents can run in parallel, handling different parts of a project, while engineers oversee the process, step in when needed, and ensure the final output is reliable. This setup allows teams to move faster without removing human control.

The results are already visible. Google says a complex code migration project was completed six times faster when AI agents worked alongside engineers compared to earlier methods. In another example, the company’s Gemini app for macOS went from an early concept to a working native Swift prototype within just a few days using its internal AI tools. But, since AI is able to do the work way too fast and quickly, there are chances that we are not that far away from the time when only a few human engineers will be needed to do the work.

Google is also using its own ecosystem to build and test these systems. Infrastructure like Bigtable and custom chips such as TPUs continue to support this rapid development, allowing the company to run large-scale AI workloads efficiently.

At the same time, this progress is adding to a growing debate about jobs. Former Google executive Mo Gawdat recently warned in Diary of a CEO podcast that AI could drastically reduce the need for large teams, as machines become capable of handling tasks across coding, content, and even leadership roles. Speaking of which, it is worth mentioning that it was recently reported that Meta is allegedly creating an AI avatar of CEO Mark Zuckerberg to handle all the internal discussions with employees. So, we have likely started moving in the direction that Gawdat is hinting at.

AI researcher Geoffrey Hinton has also raised concerns about how advanced systems may behave in the future, especially if they begin operating in ways that are not easily understood by humans.

Latest

A robot is beating human pros at table tennis. Its maker calls it a milestone for machines

A robot is beating human pros at table tennis. Its maker calls it a milestone for machines

Anker made an AI chip to take on Apple and Sony, says it works on its new earbuds locally

Anker made its own chip called Thus to integrate AI into its products. The chip will make its debut with Soundcore earbuds. Here is what we know so far.

Pune dad, 81, outsmarts digital arrest scam, saves family from Rs 12 lakh fraud

An 81-year-old man in Pune prevented a Rs 12 lakh cyber fraud by identifying a digital arrest scam targeting his son.

Trapped in an elevator? AI system at Namo Bharat stations can raise alarm in 60 seconds

Trapped in an elevator? AI system at Namo Bharat stations can raise alarm in 60 seconds

Topics

Russian oil waiver decision followed requests from vulnerable countries: Bessent

The US extended a Russian oil waiver after requests from over 10 vulnerable nations, keeping supplies flowing to India where imports remain near record highs, h

Data war next? Iran-linked report flags cable cut risk in Strait of Hormuz

Iran-linked Tasnim report warns undersea cable damage in Strait of Hormuz could trigger major internet outages across Gulf, highlighting growing risks to critic

Legal immigration drops faster than illegal entries under Trump, H-1B visas down 25%

Legal immigration to the US has dropped far more than illegal crossings under Trump, with H-1B visas, students and families hardest hit, according to Cato’s D

Why Elon Musk can’t stop talking about the country he fled at 17

Elon Musk claims South Africa has more race-based laws now than under apartheid. Is it a "shameful disgrace" or part of necessary reform? A deep dive into the d

I don’t want to tell you jack sh*t: Ilhan Omar hits back at reporter over finances

Ilhan Omar snapped at a reporter over financial disclosure discrepancies after revising her net worth from millions to thousands, as Republicans demand scrutiny

Is Denmark using Iran’s LEGO videos as quiet revenge for Trump’s Greenland threats?

Exploring Denmark's strategic use of LEGO in international diplomacy

Oil Servicer Weatherford Sees War Impacts Deepening This Quarter

Weatherford International Plc., one of the world’s largest oilfield-service providers, is warning that a hit to earnings in the wake of the Iran war will get

Exclusive-Thoma Bravo nears agreement to turn software firm Medallia over to creditors, source says

THOMABRAVO-MEDALLIA:Exclusive-Thoma Bravo nears agreement to turn software firm Medallia over to creditors, source says
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img