They’re an ad company that just happens to offer search as a way to show ads.
Their ideal scenario is one where you search forever and never find what you were looking for.
Comment on In heat
daerion@feddit.org 21 hours ago
Google was fine as it was before, now it does shit like this. I hate how AI is shoved down our throats. And the results on google nowadays feel so much worse and generic than a few years ago. That isn’t just a feeling I have, right?
They’re an ad company that just happens to offer search as a way to show ads.
Their ideal scenario is one where you search forever and never find what you were looking for.
Really? Felt like Google jumped the shark quite awhile before this even started.
It been a downhill slope that just keeps getting steeper. They’re basically falling off a cliff right now, and their parachute is improving AI.
Not just you. I feel like search modifiers like “NOT” or “OR” haven’t been working for a good long while either.
They stopped supporting booleans in 2013. Glad you’ve finally noticed.
While it’s nice to finally have closure on this, it’s also depressing that they removed that.
One of the reason why I advice people to switch to Ecosia or DuckDuckGo
Append ?udm=14 to your Google search results
I’m not opening that Rick Astley link, thank you.
No it’s a real link
I’d rather use anything else
Dettweiler42@lemmy.dbzer0.com 21 hours ago
Add obscenities to your search for the most optimized results. It drops the AI component and seems to provide the more direct results we used to get.
MNByChoice@midwest.social 21 hours ago
I just get X-rated results.
Brandonazz@lemmy.world 20 hours ago
Say -fuck at the beginning so that it doesnt search for it.
Bubs12@lemm.ee 19 hours ago
-fuck, that’s good.
over_clox@lemmy.world 21 hours ago
It appears you were looking for Lara Croft in the nude. I think I’ve found what you’re looking for…
youtube.com/watch?v=NuFK6cLDzT4
over_clox@lemmy.world 20 hours ago
Debian Linux Script…
TR1X-Debian-3.sh
iamkindasomeone@feddit.org 12 hours ago
Add …in my ass to your last search query.