> What does this mean?

I will only attempt to answer this question, because the others would really require staff input and anything I could say there would be *purely* speculative.

As far as I can tell, it means:

> Stack Exchange, Inc. plans to host Stack Overflow on Google Cloud. The company expects that this will cause Stack Overflow to grow, and that Google Cloud's AI technology can help users to curate content and feel more like they are part of a community. Specifically, the company hopes that this AI can help get new content approved faster and make users feel better about taking part in a forum.

It's not difficult to write plainly, but many companies seem to refuse to try.

Sooner or later, companies are going to be forced to understand that throwing around all these ten-dollar words doesn't actually impress technical audiences. Using this sort of deliberately opaque writing style tends to make intelligent people suspect that you have something to hide. This shouldn't be surprising, but apparently it is for some.

And in fact, it's evident that the company *is* hiding some things here:

1. Even more vague allusions to the idea the AI can fix everything, even though the userbase has repeatedly explained to the company both what is wrong with their ideas, and what has become clearly worse on the site as a result of AI's existence.

2. A supposition that the key difficulty with curation is that content *doesn't get approved quickly enough* - a baffling proposition; in reality, the main problem is that content doesn't get rejected quickly enough. There *can't possibly* be a problem with content being approved too slowly because *it starts in an approved state* (a misguided choice that is long overdue for correction, in my opinion). I don't know how to say it any more clearly: **the main problem with Stack Overflow is that the overwhelming majority of new proposed content does not meet standards and does not belong on the site**. This is a problem that cannot be solved by AI, because the problem is primarily caused by users (mostly but certainly not exclusively new users) ignoring the intended purpose of the site. (It seems that the staff also intends to ignore the intended purpose of the site.)

3. A supposition that Stack Overflow should be about "community engagement processes" and "forum engagement experiences". This should be immediately recognized as utterly absurd by any remotely rational person. One only needs to consider how many user accounts exist on the site to recognize the folly of this immediately; but on top of that it seems that the staff have forgotten that we [simply don't do that "forum" thing here, by design](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/92107).