• Jaberw0cky@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I stopped using Google at the same time I closed my accounts with Facebook, instagram, Reddit and Amazon. Currently I’m using Ecosia which I think is German. I’m dumping all the US companies I can based on all the Trump crap. It is taking time and effort but I should be able to actually close the Google account soon and I replaced windows with Linux on all but one of my PCs.

    • dan@upvote.au
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      1 day ago

      Ecosia still uses American services though - they use Google, Bing, Yahoo and Wikipedia for search results.

      • superkret@feddit.org
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        9 hours ago

        95+% of all websites you visit are hosted on AWS or use Cloudflare.
        But that’s their decision, not yours.

        • dan@upvote.au
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          4 hours ago

          Do you have a source for that? I think it’s nowhere near 95% of sites given there’s several major providers that aren’t AWS or Cloudflare (eg Hetzner, Google Cloud, DigitalOcean, Wordpress.com, and a bunch more)

        • dan@upvote.au
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          4 hours ago

          I hope that goes well for them. It’s hard and extremely expensive, which is why there’s so few good search engines and half of them just use Bing’s API.

      • Redex@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Yeah but don’t let perfect be the enemy of good. Among other things, they just recently announced that they’re starting to build an alternative index with Qwant.

        • Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.org
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          17 hours ago

          You’re right but it’s still important to point out in this case since an American index would be subject to any American censorship law. It’s better to use Ecosia than Google for sure but we still gotta be aware of the type of bias we’re working with.

        • person1@lemm.ee
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          1 day ago

          I’m using Qwant, used Ecosia before. Really OK for most stuff. I still revert to googling occasionally - mainly for local businesses on maps and sometimes shopping results. But I agree, don’t let perfect be the enemy of good, well said.

        • dan@upvote.au
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          1 day ago

          Definitely true. I’ll have to try it out. Is Ecosia better than DuckDuckGo or Kagi?

        • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          I’ve never heard of Ecosia, but I don’t understand your logic on this.

          Problem: Google bad!

          Solution: Don’t use google, use Ecosia instead.

          Error: Ecosia also uses google.

          How is this a good move? If anything it’s just a lateral move with the same problem.

          • 3laws@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Eventually they’ll stop using G and MAYBE they have better impact in the climate. Why be a fucking prick about it?

          • LandedGentry@lemmy.zip
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            1 day ago

            Same logic for using Brave or some other chromium browser instead of Chrome proper. It is better than using Chrome proper, even if it has cons.

        • LandedGentry@lemmy.zip
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          1 day ago

          Everyone whines because it’s built on bing but it’s fine and respects privacy better than most

      • Jaberw0cky@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        I wouldn’t say dogshit, I would say the results are good enough for most purposes, not great, my priority just as the moment is dumping USA based companies and I thought Ecosia planting trees was a nice touch. Although as someone else pointed out it is still possibly using crawlers from google and bing in the background. I’m still keen to try out other search engines.

  • Teknikal@eviltoast.org
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    Google’s been garbage for years now, I kind of miss Copernic Pro which is what I used before Google it searched all the search engines available and combined and resorted all the results.

    Google was perfect at launch but in recent years it’s worse than Yahoo!.

  • JaymesRS@literature.cafe
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    1 day ago

    I work in an education setting and in the last month, Google started preloading the contents of other sites directly on the search page. It is wreaking havoc when combined with our blocking tools because kids will do a Google search for something innocuous and the page will immediately get blocked because it tried to load a result from Reddit or coursehero or something else we have blocked.

    It’s incredibly frustrating.

      • Routhinator@startrek.website
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        1 day ago

        Thats because for some ungodly reason they use Apple Maps. Not sure why they dont integrat with an OpenStreetMaps like service. At least that way users can start contributing to fill the gaps

      • JaymesRS@literature.cafe
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        23 hours ago

        That’s been my go to since they started. There is/was a challenge using them when we evaluated them a while back with forcing safe search reliability if I recall the reason.

    • unwarlikeExtortion@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      the page will immediately get blocked because it tried to load a result from Reddit or coursehero or something

      Does that mean any search (AI insight notwithstanding) will get blocked if it includes a Reddit, Coursera or something on the blocklist result at all?

      Because if yes, that’s much more than just asinine. It’s basically blocking entire search topics due to the sheer fact that Reddit will appear on the furst page of Google a lot.

      • JaymesRS@literature.cafe
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        That is exactly what is happening. They type in the search query on their Chromebook (for example, “why do dry erase markers float”, the results page flashes for a second and then the “this page is blocked” screen comes up saying they were blocked from Reddit, et al. Without them clicking on any search results.

        And 2 kids can do the exact same search at the same time and get blocked for different sites or only one will get blocked.

            • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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              Oh I thought it was a typo. I have no idea what coursehero is.

              I will say coursera is awesome for their calculus classes. (Or they were like 10+ years ago anyway.) Which caught me up after a long hiatus from college when I returned to finish.

              • JaymesRS@literature.cafe
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                1 day ago

                To be fair, I don’t know that we don’t block coursera as well but the block I specifically saw was for a course hero. And some of the blocks that we have on are for security reasons over reliability reasons. We have to be hyper cautious about the students leaking any potentially PHI and some of the Google sign in setups are less secure than others.

  • Grizzlyboy@lemm.ee
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    I switched when the answers I got started to become bullshit. I’d google a simple question just to double check if it was correct, but it gave me something completely different. Something so out of the realm of possibility that I was baffled.

    I check the sources for the answer and they were not even related. After that I started paying more attention to how messed up google had become, and I had enough.

    Google scholar however is still something I need… even though I dislike American corporations.

    • turtlesareneat@discuss.online
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      It’s kind of unreal that they took something that worked perfectly well for 25 years and then fucked it up entirely overnight, for no good reason.

      Stick in bike spokes meme.

      • WanderingThoughts@europe.pub
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        They did that to drive up short term ad revenue and it worked, and joy was in their greedy little hearts. They also did figure out that poisoning search results drives away users, and that search is kinda the fastest gateway drug to their entire ecosystem.

        But they’re stuck. Fixing search would lower their ad revenue, and stock holders would kill them for that.

        • cantstopthesignal@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          Also, the way SEO is gamed, it’s really hard to unenshittify the internet. It’s not just their ads, it’s everyone making fake bullshit that pulls the right levers to get to the top of a search.

      • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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        1 day ago

        and the nature of their 1000s of experiments going at the same time isn’t methodical at all. they don’t actually know what iteration of google search was the best and most useful one. there’s no going back to what worked because at no point did they ever know what worked. the modern shitty google search is the best version we will ever get to use again.

        google embedded them as a core piece of information infrastructure and then demolished themselves. now our information networks fundamentally do not work anymore

        • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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          21 hours ago

          I’m not going to defend google, but it’s important to understand the nature of the beast. It’s not possible to simply revert back to an older version of search ranking because it is a constant cat-and-mouse game between google developers and malicious actors trying to game the system with their shitty websites.

      • FartsWithAnAccent@fedia.io
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        1 day ago

        Sure, but this is a process that takes time; that said, he trend is downward and that will likely continue unless things improve.

        • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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          And if tech people are no longer recommending it, or actively recommending against it, it is possible to get people to start switching. This is largely how chrome became so popular in the first place, and that required getting people to change from the default option.

        • dogs0n@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          The recent duckduckgo ad campaign will surely help rescue googlers and so does my mission to ensure everyone I know doesn’t use google search.

  • noodlejetski@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    These numbers underline the current trend to choose European services instead of American ones, which followed the trend to deGoogle.

    [the chart shows stats for American Google, American Bing, Russian Yandex, American Yahoo!, American DuckDuckGo, and Other]

    • JuvenoiaAgent@lemmy.ca
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      Yeah, that statement wasn’t supported by the data at all. It seemed to only be included as a way to link to their other articles about European alternatives and de-Googling.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      Russian Yandex

      Exceptionally good at finding torrent sites and other piracy outlets, because they aren’t working hand-in-glove with American broadcasters to censor and shadowban these links. Google, Bing, DDG, and the other American mainline search sites all focus on feeding end-users into a discrete set of Web2 mega-site sponsors. Yandex uses the older web crawlers and indexing tools, so it gives more honest (abet fuzzier and less reliable) results. And since nobody really gives a shit about Yandex, the efforts to game its algorithm have been comparatively minimal.

      Yandex also has the benefit of being relatively English-friendly, while other popular non-English search sites like Baidu, Qwant, and Naver don’t cater too quite so freely.

      • toofpic@lemmy.world
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        And they have really good products - the Navigator is great, and Yandex Music was better than Spotify (until the war started and a lot of labels/artists disappeared).
        I’m not using their products now as I don’t want to feed the government, but they do(did?) some great stuff.

      • Mike@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        Who still uses search engines to find torrent, though?

        • dan@upvote.au
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          It’s been common ever since magnet links were created, since you can post a magnet link anywhere (even in a plain text file) rather than having to upload a .torrent file somewhere like in the old days.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          Sites periodically get taken down or rendered less than useful. Especially for live streaming.

          Yandex was invaluable when I was looking for Olympics streams, for instance. Also really depends on which communities are hosting to which torrent sites. I found nyaa.si off Yandex, because I couldn’t find the anime I was looking for on 1337x.to.

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍@discuss.tchncs.de
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    I went long enough without using Google (probably a year-ish) that, when I accidentally made a Google search a few days ago, it was a jarring experience.

    It felt wrong the same way other search engines did when I first deGoogled. It was kind of nice actually.

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      The irony is Gemini is really good (like significantly better than ChatGPT), and cheap for them (no GPUs needed), yet somehow they made it utterly unbearable in search.

      • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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        Gemini is really good at confidently talking nonsense but other than that I don’t really see where you get the idea that it is good. Mind you, that isn’t much better with the other LLMs.

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          So it’s really good at the thing LLMs are good at. Don’t judge a fish by it’s ability to climb a tree etc…

          • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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            No, it is mediocre at best compared to other models but LLMs in general have a very minimal usefulness.

            • FinnFooted@lemmy.world
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              I get the desire to say this, but I find them extremely helpful in my line of work. Literally everything they say needs to be validated, but so does Wikipedia and we all know that Wikipedia is extremely useful. It’s just another tool. But its a very useful tool if you know how to apply it.

              • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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                But Wikipedia is basically correct 99% of the time on basic facts if you look at non-controversial topics where nobody has an incentive to manipulate it. LLMs meanwhile are lucky if 20% of what they see even has any relationship to reality. Not just complex facts either, if an LLM got wrong how many hands a human being has I wouldn’t be surprised.

                • FinnFooted@lemmy.world
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                  18 hours ago

                  LLMs with access to the internet are usually about as factually correct as their search results. If it searches someone’s blog, you’re right, the results will suck. But if you tell it to use higher quality resources, it returns better information. They’re good if you know how to use them. And they aren’t good enough to be replacing as many jobs as all these companies are hoping. LLMs are just going to speed up productivity. They need babysitting and validating. But they’re still an extremely useful tool that’s only going to get better and LLMs are here to stay.

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          It can be grounded in facts. It’s great at RAG. But even alone, Gemini 2.5 is kinda shockingly smart.

          …But the bigger point is how Google presents it. It shouldn’t be the top result of every search just thrown into your face, it should be a opt-in, transparent, conditional feature with clear warnings, and only if it can source a set of whitelisted, reliable websites.

          • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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            After just trying it again a few times today for a few practical problems that it not only misunderstood at first completely and then gave me a completely hallucinated answer to every single one I am sorry, but the only thing shocking about it is how stupid it is despite Google’s vast resources. Not that stupid/smart really apply to statistical analysis of language.

            • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              Gemini 2.5? Low temperature, like 0.2?

              The one they use in search is awful, and not the same thing. Also, it’s not all knowing, you gotta treat it like it has no internet access (because generally it doesn’t).

    • FauxPseudo @lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I had that happen too. Couldn’t find something with DDG. Hopped over to Google and was shocked at how completely unusable it was.

  • suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    I abandoned Google when they started throwing shopping links at the top of every search, even when searching for things that have no relevance to shopping, and they started artificially promoting scams and paid material above actual results.

    Google Search was best around 10-15 years ago when their only focus was providing the best results they could (remember when you could actually click the top result and you would be taken to the most applicable page instead of some unrelated ad or scam?). Now their focus is on providing the best product possible for their actual customers (paid advertisers) even when it means trashing their own product in the process.

    • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      15+ years ago you could search for an error code, or an error message, or a part number and actually find it.

    • sibachian@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      they also ruined their own platform by creating and encouraging an entire business around gaming search results.

  • Dacrydium@lemmy.wtf
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    I’ve fully switched to ecosia. I much prefer their efforts, and they seem to fund decent projects unlike a lot of other carbon offset companies.

    • mesamunefire@lemmy.worldOP
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      Google been degrading as time has gone on. The other search engines (like all of them) are getting or surpassing google in certain subjects. AI has really made them look like fools in all of this. Googles AI sucks for results and (while I dont like it) others are using chatgpt for search results.

      • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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        I would say it is just the opposite. Google used to be good before they tried to post-process results in this extreme way and AI is just an even more extreme way to do that. ChatGPT and all the other LLMs just increase the noise to signal ratio (noise coming first because there is so much more of it than signal these days).

        • mesamunefire@lemmy.worldOP
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          I actually agree. Others use chatgpt for just about everything. I dont like it for many…many reasons.

          Google was much better pre-2020.

          • dan@upvote.au
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            Google was best in the 2000s, but things were different back then. They were still a young company trying to improve the world, SEO spam wasn’t really a thing yet, there were far fewer websites, and most online discussions were archived and searchable (compared to today where there’s platforms like Discord that aren’t indexable in search engines at all).

          • applemao@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            People use chat gpt to tell them what to buy. We are doomed. Our brains are about to shrink to the size of a pea in 10 years. All is going to plan for the elite.

            • mesamunefire@lemmy.worldOP
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              Its funny because you can totally run good LLMs on local systems but people are just going to chat because its what they know and its easy to work with. Like I get it, but they are starting to put ads in the prompts now.

        • doodledup@lemmy.world
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          21 hours ago

          For a growing number of users, we can provide search results and ads from Google. For the eligible users, we will provide Google results by default. When your search results and ads are provided by Google, Google will use essential cookies and local storage to help defend against fraudulent traffic. Beyond this, the cookies Google uses will depend on where you are searching from: If you search from the EU, UK or certain US states (for example California), Google will not set additional cookies without your consent. If you search from elsewhere, Google may place additional cookies and the functionality of these cookies will depend on whether you have a Google account

          Seems like using Ecosia is about as private as using Google directly.

    • 3laws@lemmy.world
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      Best AI models from OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, Google - included in one $25/mo subscription with our Ultimate plan.

      Same trash.

      • Opisek@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        Privacy company offers privacy focused LLMs for users that would’ve otherwise paid for ChatGPT. Unbelievable

        Did you actually ever try Kagi or do you just want to spit uninformed delusions?

    • LandedGentry@lemmy.zip
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      The last lingering service I use is gcal. It’s so hard to ditch because so many other people use it that I share calendars with.