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I've seen this strategy in movie and music business and the only reason I can think of is that they don't actually want to sell the product. Their real income is from something else, like sub-licensing to third-parties, so that they don't have to handle end users which is labor intensive. Or maybe they just want to get bought.
I would say that, generally speaking, data regulation is another huge topic. Not sure if how much it applies here though, but considering they process payments and similar, they need to implement GDPR stuff for Europe
Ads aren't the only problem. All the SEO clickbait is worse than the ads in my opinion. I can ignore the ads, but anymore a lot of the time the first page or two of results are just clickbait junk. Look at their example results. #3 looks like an SEO clickbait site to me.
edit: Looks like you can customize results somewhat, so maybe that will help? A quick way to silence those kinds of hits would be nice.
For those who have joined, I'm curious about the following query:
Are women better than men at limbo?
The results on Google[0] and Bing[1] are both entirely useless clickbait. I just want to know if women can bend back farther than men without falling over.
At least Yandex seems to have gotten the gist of the question, and isn't full of clickbait, even if it doesn't answer the question (and seems to have mostly ignored the word "limbo")
I don't know enough about SEO/web crawlers, so this might be a silly question, but there is a way to identify SEO optimized websites, right? Isn't there a special file or something?
Not sure if it'd be optimal, but dropping all search results with such optimization might bring a more broad search across the internet (more sites than just the common clickbait ones).
Dropping SEO optimized results from a search is a bit of an oxymoronical idea. You'd essentially be punishing websites for simply ranking higher in search results which doesn't make sense.
I'm a little bit skeptical about this notion that the ad model is fundamentally detrimental to the search results that Google gives you. It honestly doesn't even seem like it makes business sense. At the end of the day Google benefits from giving the most accurate results in the long term, and it's such a money printing engine I don't think they're degrading the search quality.
Whenever I tried privacy-first or "non-ad" search engines, most recently duckduckgo, I found myself spamming !g a lot.
It's nice to have an alternative obviously and I hope it's sustainable to have a paid search engine but it in some sense seems more like a lifestyle product to me.
Looks like it's a $5 a month search engine. This is something I've kind of wanted for ages, so I guess I'll sign up and see how it works. I secretly wish Mozilla the corporation would of made their own search engine with a subscription model ages ago.
Mozilla corp / non-profit has a history somewhat similar to Google's where they seem to build things they phase out, and not do things to make themselve sustainable enough to not have to mass fire people who do a net good for the greater internet community that relies on them (thinking of MDN).
This is super exciting. Every single "free" service that is supported by ad revenue should have a counterpart that is paid instead.
I'm excited to try this, although I do tons of search from iOS, and want to know if this can be selected as the default search engine. It isn't clear from the FAQ.
I was approved for their beta, but they wanted to install an extension. Then I tried their reveal today, need an account just to see. Maybe they’ll get the buzz they’re looking for, but I don’t trust their product management I’d this is how the test and launch.
So the business model here seams to be to partner with content providers?
Aren't ads a kind of partnership as well?
Why should we expect this partnership not to bias the search results in a detrimental way (for the users) as ads do?
edit: Looks like you can customize results somewhat, so maybe that will help? A quick way to silence those kinds of hits would be nice.
Are women better than men at limbo?
The results on Google[0] and Bing[1] are both entirely useless clickbait. I just want to know if women can bend back farther than men without falling over.
0. https://www.middleendian.com/limbogoogle.png
1. https://www.middleendian.com/limbobing.png
https://imgur.com/a/XTIDjEG
Not sure if it'd be optimal, but dropping all search results with such optimization might bring a more broad search across the internet (more sites than just the common clickbait ones).
Whenever I tried privacy-first or "non-ad" search engines, most recently duckduckgo, I found myself spamming !g a lot.
It's nice to have an alternative obviously and I hope it's sustainable to have a paid search engine but it in some sense seems more like a lifestyle product to me.
Mozilla corp / non-profit has a history somewhat similar to Google's where they seem to build things they phase out, and not do things to make themselve sustainable enough to not have to mass fire people who do a net good for the greater internet community that relies on them (thinking of MDN).
I'm excited to try this, although I do tons of search from iOS, and want to know if this can be selected as the default search engine. It isn't clear from the FAQ.
Also, we have instructions for setting Neeva as the default search on mobile Firefox and Chrome, along with a "workaround" for Safari: https://help.neeva.com/hc/en-us/articles/1500011550601-How-t...
(I'm an engineer working on Neeva)