Go was released in 2009, which is 13 years ago. Many companies have built significant portions of their stacks on top of Go....Twitch, Google, Uber, Lyft, Amazon, etc.
It's widely used in industry and isn't going anywhere.
I worked at one of those places and helped rewrite components into Go ;) Sure, there were performance benefits but in my experience there was never a real business problem that Go solved that Python couldn’t.
All the people freaking out about performance didn’t realize that even in the Python days, half of our datacenters pretty much sat idle or severely underutilized. Computing is dirt cheap as long as you’re not renting a 15-year-old CPU from a Cloud Provider for 100x markup. The other thing is that engineers would frequently build things that were just wasteful or unnecessary, and sure, Go sped things up, but you could have changed the design instead of the language.
So did I :) One of those places replaced an interpreted language used for a process intensive core function with Go and saw a massive performance increase...resulting in clear cost savings.
But Go isn't a silver bullet. It's another tool in the toolbox and sometimes it makes sense to reach for Python, or Kotlin, or Swift, etc. But choosing Python when you should've chosen Rust / Go / D is a tough design decision to quickly come back from.
It's widely used in industry and isn't going anywhere.