In the summer of 2025, I was trying to locate public-domain image platforms that handled Creative Commons licensing properly.
That search eventually led me to Wikimedia Commons, and into another problem entirely.
In Pakistan, parts of the site were intermittently inaccessible. Sometimes pages loaded. Sometimes thumbnails appeared while full media pages failed. At first, it looked like an ordinary connectivity issue. It wasn’t.
Official explanations were vague. Online discussions pointed in different directions. Some referenced blasphemy disputes. Others blamed Wikipedia moderation or controversial religious material. None fully explained why one of the world’s largest free media repositories had become entangled in a national access dispute.
Months later, while revisiting those debates, I stumbled into a much older controversy, one involving Google Search, English Wikipedia, and a disputed religious question that had been circulating online since at least 2020.
Search Google for “current caliph of worldwide muslim community” or "present caliph of Islam" and the answer does not stay stable.
Change the wording slightly, and Google’s AI Overview system responds differently.
Different wording. Same question. Different answer.
In some cases, Google’s AI Overviews state that no universally recognized caliph exists in mainstream Islam today.
Slight wording shifts often changed the answer completely
Searches such as:
- “who is caliph of Islam”
- “current caliph of Islam”
- “does Islam have a caliph today”
- “current Islamic caliphate”
often generate relatively cautious AI Overviews.
In repeated tests conducted across multiple sessions, Google frequently explained that the historical Ottoman caliphate formally ended in 1924, that no single universal caliph is recognized by the vast majority of the world’s roughly 1.9 billion Muslims today, and that some groups, including the Ahmadiyya Community, maintain their own internal caliphate structures.
The supporting search results were similarly broad and historical, frequently linking to sources such as Encyclopaedia Britannica’s entry on the caliphate and Wikipedia’s historical lists of caliphs.
But small wording changes often shifted the framing completely.
Searches including, "current caliph of global community" and “present caliph of worldwide muslims”, in a number of cases returned AI-generated summaries centered on Mirza Masroor Ahmad, the fifth caliph and leader of the Ahmadiyya Community.
The summaries were polished and authoritative in tone. They described his election in 2003, humanitarian campaigns, and global leadership role.
Sometimes the summaries later clarified that mainstream Sunni and Shia do not recognize him as a universal caliph.
Sometimes the clarification appeared only near the end of the response, behind a “Show more” prompt.
In some versions, it did not appear at all.
The discrepancy appeared repeatedly across searches.
After dozens of searches, the pattern became difficult to dismiss
Historically, the term “caliph” referred to leadership claiming succession to the Islamic Prophet Muhammad in guiding the Muslim community (Ummah). For centuries, different dynasties claimed the title. Today, however, no single universally recognized caliph exists across the global Muslim population.
Yet Google’s systems often treated the question as though it pointed toward one identifiable figure.
Some less conventional searches produced even more unusual results.
Queries such as:
- “current caliph and top leader in the world of technology”
- “present caliph of Islam in Google head office”
still frequently pointed toward Mirza Masroor Ahmad before expanding into unrelated discussions involving satellite television networks, or international speeches.
Another Google and Gemini search, “present caliph messiah in the global community”, produced an answer emphasizing peace advocacy, parliamentary visits, disaster relief work, and international leadership activities before later clarifying that the framing reflected Ahmadiyya beliefs.
One answer read less like a response to a disputed religious question than a polished leadership profile.
Across multiple searches, a recurring pattern was observed: ambiguous religious queries repeatedly drifted toward the same structured entity.
In practice, the results suggested that Google’s systems may prioritize the most strongly structured or prominently linked “caliph” profile available within its search ecosystem.
Google’s search systems favor recognizable entities
Google has publicly described Search as increasingly dependent on entity understanding and structured information systems.
In its Knowledge Graph announcement, the company explained that Google aims to understand “things, not strings”, connecting words to identifiable people, places, organizations, and concepts.
That approach works well for many factual searches.
Religious authority questions are difficult because different groups believe different things.
Most of the information appearing in these AI summaries was factually accurate within the Ahmadiyya context.
The problem was how confidently the system framed a disputed religious question.
Taha Yasseri, a Professor and Chair of Technology and Society at Trinity College Dublin and Technological University Dublin, said the behavior reflects a broader structural challenge in generative search systems.
“In domains such as religion, history, or identity, disagreement is often not a flaw in the information ecosystem but an inherent feature of the subject itself,” Yasseri wrote in comments provided for this article.
He argued that AI systems optimized for “coherent and concise answers” can create an “illusion of consensus” by compressing disagreement into a single authoritative-seeming response.
According to Yasseri, systems handling contested topics should make disagreement visible, attribute viewpoints clearly, and communicate uncertainty where no universal consensus exists.
Google’s systems are generally designed to deliver direct answers.
Some questions, however, were never universally answered in the first place.
The controversy was already public before AI Overviews existed
Complaints about the issue were publicly visible years before Google launched AI Overviews.
In December 2020, users began posting complaints on Google Search Help forums after searches for “present caliph of Islam” surfaced the Ahmadiyya leader prominently.
The discussion accumulated substantial engagement, with more than 150 users marking “I have the same question.”
Some comments devolved into sectarian hostility directed at the Ahmadiyya community.
Others focused directly on Google’s search behavior and questioned why disputed religious information was being presented so definitively.
The dispute had already become publicly contentious by late 2020.
Ahmadiyya-affiliated publications published articles defending the search result as evidence of the movement’s global religious legitimacy, while critics organized online campaigns urging users to report the Google answer as misleading.
What began as a search-quality issue increasingly became a symbolic dispute over religious authority, visibility, and representation online.
Then Wikipedia publicly stepped in
One volunteer Google product expert responding in the forum thread eventually pointed users toward a clarification page created by Wikipedia itself.
That page became one of the clearest public acknowledgments of the issue.
In a dedicated notice titled Ahmadiyya Caliphate information, Wikipedia states that Google searches for “current caliph of Islam” or similar phrases may “incorrectly display” the Wikipedia article about Mirza Masroor Ahmad.
The clarification then makes the distinction explicit:
“This issue is caused by Google’s algorithms incorrectly interpreting Wikipedia’s article on the Ahmadiyya Caliphate. This misinformation does not come from Wikipedia...”
The notice states that the issue had existed since at least December 2020 and remained active in May 2026.
The behavior survived years of public complaints, multiple Google Search updates, and the arrival of AI-generated search summaries.
Wikipedia, neutrality, and AI systems inheriting structure
The controversy also intersected with longstanding debates about neutrality and representation on Wikipedia itself.
In a broader discussion about Wikipedia’s editorial model, a recent analysis published by The Conversation argued that the platform’s neutrality system depends on ongoing negotiation over sourcing, balanced representation, and editorial weight.
Rob Nicholls, a researcher at the University of Sydney, said in an email to this reporter that the behavior may reflect broader limitations in how AI systems process and reuse information from widely used online sources.
Nicholls noted that Wikipedia is widely used in AI training and information retrieval systems because of its permissive licensing structure and enormous volume of structured content.
“AI chat services miss subtleties,” Nicholls wrote in comments provided for this article. “This may also seem like reinforcing stereotypes or falsehoods.”
He also warned that consensus-driven systems can flatten nuance or reinforce “groupthink” when information about a topic is unevenly represented.
How the controversy reached Pakistan
Because many users blamed Wikipedia for Google’s search outputs, the issue eventually became entangled with wider online disputes involving religious authority and content moderation.
In February 2023, Pakistan temporarily blocked Wikipedia amid disputes involving allegedly sacrilegious material.
The episode was covered by outlets including The Express Tribune, and Gizmodo. The restriction was later lifted after intervention from Pakistan’s prime minister.
Discussions inside Wikimedia communities later referenced broader concerns about Wikimedia Commons accessibility inside Pakistan and debates surrounding religious-content moderation online.
Google acknowledged AI mistakes, but the issue persisted
Google’s AI Overviews are generated using large language models and related search systems designed to synthesize information into concise answers.
Google openly acknowledges the technology’s limitations.
In its own AI Overviews documentation, the company states:
“AI Overviews can and will make mistakes.”
The same documentation advises users to verify important information using multiple sources and compare answers by rephrasing questions.
That advice becomes unusually relevant here because slight wording changes can produce entirely different interpretations of the same religious issue.
Some searches now generate historically grounded summaries acknowledging that mainstream Islam has no universally recognized caliph today.
Others still drift toward confident entity resolution centered around one movement’s leadership structure.
The inconsistency suggests multiple overlapping systems interacting imperfectly:
- query interpretation,
- knowledge graph matching,
- entity resolution,
- generative summarization,
- ranking systems prioritizing highly structured and heavily linked information,
- and AI safeguards attempting to balance certainty with nuance.
Other search engines handled the ambiguity inconsistently as well.
At times, DuckDuckGo, Yandex, and Microsoft Bing began by clarifying that no universally recognized caliph exists in mainstream Islam before separately introducing the Ahmadiyya position. At other times, they produced results resembling Google’s framing.
Search systems appeared to repeatedly converge on a single reference point for a concept that lacks one universally accepted definition.
Requests for comment
Between multiple reporting sessions conducted during 2026, this reporter contacted Google Press requesting clarification about how AI Overviews handle disputed religious questions, whether sensitive religious queries receive contextual review, and why years of public feedback appeared not to have resolved the issue. Google did not respond to multiple requests for comment by publication time. During later testing conducted after those outreach attempts, some AI Overviews appeared to shift toward more historically framed responses emphasizing that no universally recognized caliph exists today. Because Google’s AI-generated search outputs can change over time, it remains unclear whether those shifts reflected routine system updates, query variation, experimentation, or broader adjustments to AI Overview behavior.
This reporter also contacted media representatives affiliated with the Ahmadiyya Community requesting clarification regarding how the community distinguishes its internal caliphate structure from wider Muslim representation, and whether it had previously communicated with Google regarding related search terminology. No response was received by publication time.
The Wikimedia Foundation was also contacted regarding how Wikipedia handles contested religious authority structures and ensures that internal doctrinal perspectives and external viewpoints are represented with appropriate due weight, particularly when external AI systems extract structured content from encyclopedia articles. The Wikimedia Foundation did not respond to multiple requests for comment by publication time.
Conclusion
For most users, the issue may appear obscure, one unusual religious query among billions processed every day.
But the episode reveals something larger about modern AI search systems.
Search engines increasingly do more than organize information.
They interpret it. They summarize it. They compress disagreement into readable answers.
And in some cases, they present answers with a level of certainty that may not fully reflect underlying disagreement or ambiguity.
For years, asking Google who leads the world’s Muslims has produced answers that sound definite, even though the question itself has no single agreed-upon answer.
Methodology
Searches referenced in this article were conducted across multiple sessions between 2025 and 2026 using Google Search and AI Overviews, including signed-out browser tests and incognito sessions where available.
Because AI-generated search results can vary over time, by location, language settings, and between users and screenshots were retained during reporting.
Limits of observation
The searches described here reflect a limited set of queries conducted across specific sessions and environments. Google Search and AI Overviews can vary based on factors such as location, language settings, personalization signals, indexing updates, and ongoing model changes. As a result, the outputs observed should be understood as illustrative examples of system behavior rather than a comprehensive or fixed representation. These systems are actively evolving, and similar queries may produce different responses over time as ranking and generative models are updated.
Timeline
- December 2020: Complaints about Google’s “present caliph of Islam” search results appear publicly on Google Search Help forums.
- 2020–2022: Wikipedia publishes clarification notices stating that disputed search outputs do not originate from Wikipedia itself.
- February 2023: Pakistan temporarily blocks Wikipedia amid broader religious-content disputes.
- 2024: Google expands AI-generated summaries through AI Overviews.
- 2025–2026: Variations of the disputed search behavior remain publicly visible.
Read next:
• You can persuade AI models to accept falsehoods as truth, study shows
• Missing Information Can Misinform: Readers Don’t Need False Information to Get the Wrong Idea
by Irfan Ahmad via Digital Information World








