ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
Last year I put together a guide to help people get off US tech — and that includes Google. There are a lot of alternatives there they will help you make a plan to pull away from Google services, and all the rest of them too.
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Last year I put together a guide to help people get off US tech — and that includes Google. There are a lot of alternatives there they will help you make a plan to pull away from Google services, and all the rest of them too.
@parismarx I read that article when you first posted it, and it’s still solid.
A question, though, that occurred to me with this Google search change and I was reminded about scanning over this article again: StartPage strips out the trackers from Google search results and offers those for its search results. What’s idea going to happen to it now that Google will effectively not offer any (clickable/reliable/not slop) search results?
I’m going to throw this onto a stand-alone post as well in case others have any insight.
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Last year I put together a guide to help people get off US tech — and that includes Google. There are a lot of alternatives there they will help you make a plan to pull away from Google services, and all the rest of them too.
@parismarx Duckduckgo is a good search engine... #DOEI
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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
@parismarx isnt the web already dead?
To me its virtually useless now -
@parismarx isnt the web already dead?
To me its virtually useless now@kcpoole @parismarx We're on the open social web right now.
Rumors of the web's death are greatly exaggerated.

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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
@parismarx I read this with much interest. As I was reading I found out that I had already done it!
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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
@parismarx I started using #Kagi several months ago. After a quick foray with their free trial, I quickly decided that $10/month was well worth all the value they deliver (search, translate, assistant...).
Since switching to Kagi, I don't think I've done a single Google search, unless it was by accident.
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Last year I put together a guide to help people get off US tech — and that includes Google. There are a lot of alternatives there they will help you make a plan to pull away from Google services, and all the rest of them too.
@parismarx The Norwegian weather service Yr (meaning drizzle) is popular also internationally:
https://www.yr.no/en
They also have mobile apps.
Made by MET Norway and the public broadcasting company NRK. Free and no ads. -
ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
@parismarx
Fortunately there are other search engines which still work, and some even let you block AI results. Setting google to only search results from before 2019 also helps, but it doesnt work for image searches for some reason. -
J jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic
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@parismarx I started using #Kagi several months ago. After a quick foray with their free trial, I quickly decided that $10/month was well worth all the value they deliver (search, translate, assistant...).
Since switching to Kagi, I don't think I've done a single Google search, unless it was by accident.
@thegaffer @parismarx I've also been using Kagi on the $10/month plan and I'm really happy with it for the same reasons.
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@parismarx The Norwegian weather service Yr (meaning drizzle) is popular also internationally:
https://www.yr.no/en
They also have mobile apps.
Made by MET Norway and the public broadcasting company NRK. Free and no ads.@kjetilg I'll check it out!
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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
A timely reminder that most products that Google tried to develop itself (instead of buying from competitors) miserably failed all the time!
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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
@parismarx Haven't used Google search for about two years now. Search is a commodity and there are many alternatives. Getting rid of Google search is surprisingly easy. No network effects, no real incentive to stick with it. You can just go to another search engine. The cost of switching is basically zero.
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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
-
ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
It’s an utter stupidity…
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@parismarx Haven't used Google search for about two years now. Search is a commodity and there are many alternatives. Getting rid of Google search is surprisingly easy. No network effects, no real incentive to stick with it. You can just go to another search engine. The cost of switching is basically zero.
@alpacamale @parismarx Exactly. Similar experience here.
IMO Google isn't going to kill the web or search, they're sabotaging their own business model. People are going to move on. At some point, google will inevitably reverse course.
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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
@parismarx
Yep, over a year building a decentrilized search engine, i thought people here would have jump on #TidySearch -
ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
@parismarx well it was fun while it lasted ..
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ChatGPT was never Google’s biggest threat; it was always its own hubris.
With Search now being sacrificed on the altar of AI dominance, the time has come for users to get serious about moving off Google services. It’s not only destroying its products; it’s trying to further degrade the web itself.
@parismarx moved away long time before LLMs got big, all the tracking and searches was linked to what you were fed when it came to advertisements online.
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@kcpoole @parismarx We're on the open social web right now.
Rumors of the web's death are greatly exaggerated.

@jaredwhite @parismarx I did say virtually useless,
Mastodon and related social or some of the few places left that have not been enshittified