jsheard 9 hours ago

It always seemed like Leta was on thin ice since it queried Googles Search API and then cached the results for 30 days, which I believe is against Googles TOS. I wonder if they finally noticed and got mad.

https://developers.google.com/terms

> you will not [...] keep cached copies longer than permitted by the cache header

  • userbinator 8 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • HotGarbage 7 hours ago

      This is why we have https://4get.ca/

      • ericpruitt 7 hours ago

        Just a warning that some of the search header images are NSFW. After seeing that they were randomized, I starting going through them and got a dildo for one.

        EDIT: They've got them listed under an open index on https://4get.ca/banner/ if you want to see them all.

      • GaryBluto 6 hours ago

        > 4chan-inspired search engine

        Why would anybody ever use anything vaguely adjacent to 4chan for anything?

        • ffsm8 6 hours ago

          4 Chan continues to be the best actually "free"/borderline unmoderated forum to this date.

          It just comes with the problems that come from allowing it's users to speak whatever they want - anonymously... Hence you usually get everything there, from the most insightful to the most offensive.

          You might prefer a highly moderated platform such as HN, but 4Chan has it's own strengths if looked at from a natural position

          • Szpadel 5 hours ago

            how they deal with plain spam? if it's unmoderated and anonymous why it isn't floating in see of bot generated spam?

            • Alex2037 4 hours ago

              it's not entirely unmoderated. some of the rules are being enforced fairly strictly - for example, NSFW images on SFW boards get reported and erased within minutes. blatant spammers, shills, and schizos get dealt with too. only residential IPs can post, which reduces the volume of shit quite a bit. a dedicated schizo can shit up a thread, a coordinated raid can shit up a whole board, but given the ephemeral nature of 4chan, it's like pissing in an ocean of piss.

              rather, it is politically unmoderated. which is, of course, the pearl-clutching anathema.

        • culi 4 hours ago

          Especially when we've already got searx which accomplishes the same thing and is more transparent

      • userbinator 7 hours ago

        Your browser, IP or IP range has been blocked from this 4get instance

        Yeah, no.

    • bdcravens 7 hours ago

      By extension, shouldn't that sentiment also apply to companies that use Google's services? Such as their search API?

geokon 8 hours ago

a bit tangential but has anyone noticed a serious degredation in quality with duckduckgo? its become completely unusable and ive had to switch to Bing :(

My guess is search's days are numbered and companies are "pivoting" away to other projects

a shutdown is preferable to silent bitrot

  • Cerium 7 hours ago

    I switched to Kagi a few years ago and have not looked back. The quality has been great and continues to perform well.

  • ajdude an hour ago

    I stopped using duckduckgo and switched to kagi shortly after the tankman fiasco[1]. Never been happier- if you want to support the continued existence of search, then pay for it.

    [1] Ask HN: “Tank man” image search blocked on Bing and DuckDuckGo 560 points by MaxHoppersGhost on June 4, 2021 | 126 comments | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27394925

  • AnonC 7 hours ago

    DuckDuckGo has always been bad or just adequate for some specific purposes. Though it’s been my default search engine for a long time, I do use the “!g” bang command on the search query to switch to Google when I find that DDG’s results aren’t relevant or adequate.

    In the last year or so, I look for the summaries from “Search Assist” and the dive into a chat with the (limited?) LLM models that it provides. It’s my go to for LLM usage. It’s rarely and for more complex needs that I go to ChatGPT.

    • duttish 6 hours ago

      Whenever ddg returns shit results for me and I try !g I still get shit results, but with more ads. I've stopped trying !g since a couple of years now.

      Wonder what's different, it seems people's experience differ quite a lot.

      • culi 4 hours ago

        Truth is no one has as much data as Google and no one can build as good of a search engine as they can. Google results "suck" on purpose. They want you to google something multiple times so they can serve you more ads. But they are totally capable of building a good search engine

        Kagi is proof of this. Kagi results are almost all the Google search API. It shows that Google is completely capable of building a better search engine if they wanted to

  • lossyalgo 6 hours ago

    That's weird to hear. I've been using DDG daily since years and it's gotten progressively better, though lately every search engine's top results are often AI generated trash. To combat this it seems that DDG recently added a feature to every link in the upper-right corner to "block this site from all results" which is something I've been waiting for since SEO optimizing trash became a thing.

  • rectang 6 hours ago

    I recently bought a DDG subscription because of their duck.ai service.

    For $10/month it’s great to have someone whose incentives are aligned with my own managing my relationships with AI companies I’d otherwise have to monitor constantly for privacy abuses.

    I haven’t noticed a recent degradation in DDG’s search results, but I’m also turning to duck.ai more frequently and on the whole my search/investigation experience is better.

    The one significant downside is that duck.ai limits the length of your chats, but considering the price that’s not surprising.

    The direction I’d like to see the industry go is better integration of search results into AI chat, blurring the distinction between the two. That would make both products more compelling: search results are made more friendly with AI summaries, and original sources help to counter AI hallucinations and obsequious blather.

    • lossyalgo 6 hours ago

      AI is killing websites[0]. Why visit a website if the AI summary is good? But soon, if everyone is only using AI results, then there will be no reason to create new websites, unless you don't care about anyone visiting your site except for AI crawlers.

      [0]: I won't bother linking any articles since there are too many articles on the subject and whatever I link is probably not the site you want (or is maybe paywalled).

      • rectang 5 hours ago

        There are many serious ethical and practical problems posed by the rise of LLMs, and I agree that this is one.

        My hope is that AI helps to fine tune inquiries and helps users discover websites that would otherwise not have been uncovered by traditional index-based search.

        Unfortunately it’s in the interests of search and AI companies to keep you inside their portals, so they may be less than willing to link to the outside even when it would improve the experience.

        • lossyalgo 4 hours ago

          Hard agree. I was recently at a talk from Jaron Lanier[0], who proposed that AI should, after every query, present on the right-side of the page a list of all clickable sources where AI gathered it's data from, so that we could verify accuracy, as well as allowing us to continue giving traffic to websites.

          [0] https://www.jaronlanier.com

          edit: grammar

        • imiric 3 hours ago

          > Unfortunately it’s in the interests of search and AI companies to keep you inside their portals, so they may be less than willing to link to the outside even when it would improve the experience.

          This is true, but aren't "AI" summaries directly opposed to this interest? The user will usually get the answer they need much more quickly than if they had to scroll down the page, hunt for the right result, and get exposed to ads. So "AI" summaries are actually the better user experience.

          In time I'm sure that we'll see ads embedded in these as well, but in the current stage of the "AI" hype cycle, users actually benefit from this feature.

      • imiric 3 hours ago

        > AI is killing websites

        I think that's hyperbole.

        Yes, users can rely on "AI" summaries if they want a quick answer, but they've been able to do that for years via page snippets underneath each result, which usually highlight the relevant part of the page. The same argument was made when search engines began showing page snippets, yet we found a balance, and websites are still alive.

        On the contrary, there's an argument to be made that search engines providing answers is the better user experience. I don't want to be forced to visit a website, which will likely have filler, popups, and be SEO'd to hell, when I can get the information I want in a fraction of the time and effort, within a consistent interface. If I do need additional information, then I can go to the source.

        I do agree with the idea you mention below of search engines providing source links, but even without it, "AI" summaries can hardly be blamed for hurting website traffic. Websites are doing that on their own with user hostile design, SEO spam, scams, etc.

        There is a long list of issues we can criticize search engines for, and the use of "AI" even more so, but machine-generated summaries on SERPs is not one of them IMO.

        • lossyalgo 3 hours ago

          I guess you didn't take up my offer to search for how AI is killing traffic. There are numerous studies that repeatedly prove this to be true, this relatively recent article links to a big pile of them[0]. Why would anyone visit a website, if the AI summary is seemingly good enough?

          My issue with AI summaries is that they are not even remotely accurate, trustworthy or deterministic. Someone else posted this wonderful evidence[1] in the comments. LLMs are sycophantic and agree with you all the time, even if it means making shit up. Maybe things will improve, but for the last 2 years, I have not seen much progress regarding hallucinations or deterministic i.e. reliable/trustworthy responses. They are still stochastic token guessers with some magic tricks sprinkled on top to make results slightly better than last month's LLMs.

          And what happens when people stop creating new websites because they aren't getting any visitors (and by extension ad-revenue)? New info will stop being disseminated. Where will AI summarize data, if there is no new data to summarize? I guess they can just keep rehashing the new AI-generated websites, and it will be one big pile of endlessly recycled AI shit :)

          p.s. I don't disagree with you regarding SEO spam, hostile design, cookie popups, etc. There is even a hilariously sad website[2] which points out how annoying websites have become. But using non-deterministic sycophantic AI to "summarize" websites is not the answer, at least not in the current form.

          [0] https://www.theregister.com/2025/07/22/google_ai_overviews_s...

          [1] https://imgur.com/a/why-llm-based-search-is-scam-lAd3UHn

          [2] https://how-i-experience-web-today.com/

          edit: grammar

          • imiric an hour ago

            I'm well aware of the studies that "prove" that "AI" summaries are "killing" traffic to websites. I suppose you didn't consider my point that the same was said about snippets on SERPs before "AI"[1].

            > My issue with AI summaries is that they are not even remotely accurate, trustworthy or deterministic.

            I am firmly on the "AI" skeptic side of this discussion. And yet if there's anything this technology is actually useful for is for summarizing content and extracting key points from it. Search engines contain massive amounts of data. Training a statistical model on it that can provide instant results to arbitrary queries is a far more efficient method of making the data useful for users than showing them a sorted list of results which may or may not be useful.

            Yes, it might not be 100% accurate, but based on my own experience, it is reliable for the vast majority of use cases. Certainly beats hunting for what I need in an arbitrarily ordered list and visiting hostile web sites.

            > LLMs are sycophantic and agree with you all the time, even if it means making shit up.

            Those are issues that plague conversational UIs, and long context windows. "AI" summaries answer a single query and the context is volatile.

            > And what happens when people stop creating new websites because they aren't getting any visitors (and by extension ad-revenue)? New info will stop being disseminated.

            That's baseless fearmongering and speculation. Websites might be impacted by this feature, but they will cope, and we'll find ways to avoid the doomsday scenario you're envisioning.

            Some search engines like Kagi already provide references under their "AI" summaries. If Google is pressured to do so, they will likely do the same as well.

            So the web will survive this specific feature. Website authors should be more preoccupied with providing better content than with search engines stealing their traffic. I do think that "AI" is a net negative for the world in general, but that's a separate discussion.

            [1]: https://ahrefs.com/blog/featured-snippets-study/

            • lossyalgo 7 minutes ago

              Sorry I didn't meant to discount your argument. I don't think SERPs are a valid comparison, AI is for me an apples vs. oranges comparison, or rather rocks vs. turtles :)

              btw your linked article/study doesn't support your argument - SERPs are definitely stealing clicks (just not nearly as many as AI):

              > In other words, it looks like the featured snippet is stealing clicks from the #1 ranking result.

              I should maybe clarify: I have been using LLMs since the day they arrived on the scene and I have a love/hate relationship with them. I do use summaries sometimes, but I generally still prefer to just at least skim TFA unless it's something where I don't care about perfect accuracy. BTW did you click on that imgur link? It's pretty damning - the AI summary you get depends entirely on how you phrase your query!

              > Yes, it might not be 100% accurate, but based on my own experience, it is reliable for the vast majority of use cases. Certainly beats hunting for what I need in an arbitrarily ordered list and visiting hostile web sites.

              What does "vast majority" mean? 9 out of 10? Did/do you double-check the accuracy regularly? Or did you stop verifying after reaching the consensus that X/Y were accurate enough? I can imagine as a tech-savvy individual, that you still verify from time to time and remain skeptical but think of 99% of the users who don't care/won't bother - who just assume AI summaries are fact. That's where the crux of my issue lies: they are selling AI output as fact, when in fact, it's query-dependent, which is just insane. This will (or surely has) cost plenty of people dearly. Sure, reading a summary of the daily news is probably not gonna hurt anyone, but I can imagine people have/will get into trouble believing a summary for some queries e.g. renter rights - which I did recently (combination summaries + paid LLMs), and almost believed it until I double-checked with a friend who works in this area who then pointed out a few minor but critical mistakes, which then saved my ass from signing some bad paperwork. I'm pretty sure AI summaries are still just inaccurate, non-deterministic LLMs with some special sauce to make them slightly less sketchy.

              > Those are issues that plague conversational UIs, and long context windows. "AI" summaries answer a single query and the context is volatile.

              Just open that imgur link. Or try it for yourself. Or maybe you are just good at prompting/querying and get better results.

              > So the web will survive this specific feature. Website authors should be more preoccupied with providing better content than with search engines stealing their traffic.

              I agree the web will survive in some form or other, but as my Register link shows (with MANY linked studies), it already IS killing web traffic to a great degree because 99% of users believe the summaries. I really hope you are right, and the web is able to weather this onslaught.

  • Aurornis 6 hours ago

    I have DDG set as the primary in some places and Google as the primary on other devices, so I’ve used both in parallel for years.

    To be honest, DDG has always been far behind Google. It’s fine when I know my search result is going to be in the top 10 of any engine I use, but the moment I need to search for anything non obvious I don’t even bother with DDG any more.

    DDG does seem marginally worse today than it was maybe 5 years ago. It falls off rapidly past the first few results. Now it even seems like it just starts mixing generic results from some popular adjacent keyword into the results and hopes we don’t notice as users that it stopped trying to search by page 2.

    • zelphirkalt 3 hours ago

      Maybe the issue is not DDG itself directly, but that the web has become more shit and more inaccessible SPA nonsense.

    • NoMoreNicksLeft 5 hours ago

      I've started to wonder/worry that maybe it's not the search engines (excluding Google, I won't apologize for them). What if there's just nothing to search for? If there is little on the internet besides trash and a few big portals? Much of what you might be searching for whether you know it or not will be a reddit post, or Facebook, or Stackoverflow. And some of those places don't even allow for proper indexing by crawlers. Worse than that nightmare fuel is the idea that 2025 just isn't the same internet as we grew up with, where everyone was racing to shovel as much real content onto it as they could... today it's a bunch of grifters hoping to be influencers or Youtube personalities or skeevy scammers AI-generating slop but not much else.

      And so, even if Google was the same thing it was back in 2010, there's no longer anything for "search" to find. And I hope you all downvote me to -50 and scream at me for being a retard with some snarky-assed abuse detailing how and why I am wrong. Because I don't want to be correct about this.

      • ijk 4 hours ago

        Unfortunately, I am also worried that is the case.

        There was an era where there were a lot of completely free sites, because they were mostly academic or passion projects, both of which are subsidized by other means.

        Then there were ads. Banner adds, Google's less obtrusive text ads, etc. There were a number of sites completely supported by ads. Including a lot of blogs.

        And forums. Google+ managed to kill a lot of niche communities by offering them a much easier way to create a community and then killing it off.

        Now forums have been replaced by Discord and Reddit. Deep project sites still exist but are rarer. Social media has consolidated. Most people don't have personal home pages. There's a bunch of stuff that's paywalled behind Patreon.

        And all of that has been happening before anyone threw AI into the mix.

  • subarctic 6 hours ago

    I switched to brave search a year or two ago and found it to be an improvement

  • eviks 7 hours ago

    But ddg is just Bing? How is it worse?

    • geokon 7 hours ago

      i dont know their internals but its very clearly not. You can try side by side. Extremely basic searches fail. It seems intermittent and inconsisent. Maybe their backend to Bing fails and the fallback is terrible. Just guessing

      Right this moment it seems to work. 2 Days ago Id search for something basic like "CSS colors" and not get back a single usable result

      • lossyalgo 6 hours ago

        Are you perhaps getting AI-generated trash that is just SEO optimized? I've noticed a TON more of these results in DDG and Google lately. You can now block those websites completely from DDG as of very recently (or at least I only noticed it very recently, and it's a true godsend to filter out all this AI-generated trash).

        • geokon 5 hours ago

          how do you block them?

          but yeah its a combination of SEO trash but it also seemingly not having stuff indexed

          I'd search "Ask Clojure" or "Clojure Agents" and nothing from Clojure.org would show up

          or like "MDN SVG circle" and the MDN would just not show up.

          of course today im trying it and its all working haha

          • lossyalgo 4 hours ago

            Weird, DDG supposedly uses Bing which should be indexing everything. Then again this is Microsoft, who can't even get local search working - Win11 lately can't even find Add/Remove Programs on my PC, I have to go through Settings and click 18 times before I find it.

            re blocking: after every search in the upper-right corner of each link I see 3 dots which opens a menu and offers "block this site from all results".

  • BrenBarn 5 hours ago

    What I have noticed is how slow it is to load versus other search engines. It's not much in the scheme of things but it's noticeable.

  • dackdel 5 hours ago

    i use kagi and duckduckgo. between the two i get my work done

  • csomar 4 hours ago

    > My guess is search's days are numbered and companies are "pivoting" away to other projects

    Pretty much. Most (all?) search engines have basically stopped indexing the web. If you create content that doesn't make it through social media and has significant links, Google won't just index your website.

    No, it's not under-ranking your site. It's plainly not indexing it. So if you have weird, specific content out there; it simply won't show up for a particular search.

    Search is pretty much over and no one is interested in getting that fixed.

stevage 10 hours ago

What exactly did it do? And why can't it do that anymore?

  • culi 4 hours ago

    It's a privacy proxy for searching on Google, Brave, idk if they have others. It strips away any tracking info

    Searx is a similar idea. More powerful but definitely uglier

  • supriyo-biswas 9 hours ago

    Most likely that people are switching to LLM based search products in droves and the real demand is there.

    • netfortius 5 hours ago

      DeepSeek seems to go the way of trying to please everybody. They offer two alternatives. which you could use separately or both in the same time (named in an obvious way): DeepThink and ... well ... Search :)

    • s_ting765 6 hours ago

      Or search companies are forcing LLM products on visitors and claim "see! everyone is using our AI search instead of the regular search".

    • therein 9 hours ago

      Maybe you are but people are certainly not switching to LLM based search products in droves.

      It is the exact opposite for me. Everyone hates the LLM based search products in my circles. Just look at this shitshow.

      https://imgur.com/a/lAd3UHn

      • jdiff 9 hours ago

        Your circles might have a little more technical literacy than most. I'm working part time in retail at a hardware store currently and the amount of people who come in looking for parts specified exclusively by a single AI overview is mindboggling. People repairing car engines come in looking for bolts with specific lengths, materials, and thread pitches that AI told them they needed. I haven't had anyone come back and explicitly tell me that AI led them wrong, but I'm sure they've had to make multiple trips back out here.

        • zx8080 9 hours ago

          Hardware repairs done by AI recommendations sounds really scary and dangerous.

        • DrewADesign 9 hours ago

          TBF: people overconfident in their DIY fixing skills are precisely the sort replacing searches with an LLM query.

      • zelphirkalt 3 hours ago

        While I still often just search with Kagi, I have found it often easier to write a fullblown natural language question into Kagi Assistant, to query an LLM, which then replies and gives me the references, where it supposedly found that info. If the reply is weird, I can click through to the references and check that out.

      • tharkun__ 9 hours ago

        When I search

            switching to LLM based search products in droves.
        
        it says

            The shift towards LLM-based search products is significant as they offer more conversational and personalized responses compared to traditional search engines. This change is driven by users seeking quicker, more relevant answers and a better overall experience
        
        So it must be true, right? Coz that's the only thing I searched for. I got my answer. Why would I search for the opposite? My bias was confirmed. I'm happy and will repeat the results to all my friends, who will search for the same thing to confirm and get confirmation!
        • edoceo 9 hours ago

          This is sarcasm, correct? Cause really, you wanna find data that doesn't agree with you... if the objective is to be more smarter.

          • chmod775 8 hours ago

            ChatGPT agreed it's not sarcasm.

            • BolexNOLA 7 hours ago

              This hurts but it’s so accurate lol

      • nl 8 hours ago

        > Just look at this shitshow.

        > https://imgur.com/a/lAd3UHn

        I don't follow NFL viewership numbers but searching and reading the results seems to indicate some support for that trend.

        What's wrong with it?

        • chmod775 8 hours ago

          Scroll down. There's more.

          The LLM responded in the affirmative to all queries, even when they seem to contradict each other.

          > NFL viewership went down? Yes!

          > NFL viewership went up? Yes!

          > Home prices are going down? Yes!

          > Home prices are going up? Yes!

          Google is confirming people's biases on an industrial scale. Surely this is not going to do any damage...

          • gruez 7 hours ago

            Isn't traditional search going to have the same issue? If you search about how chocolate is good for you, you'll turn up plenty of sites willing to confirm your beliefs, AI summary or not.

            • navigate8310 7 hours ago

              Then where's the intelligence in it which a huge chunk of biomass wants to rely upon?

        • BolexNOLA 7 hours ago

          I have so many conflicting emotions/impulses.

          1) don’t believe everything you read on the internet

          2) it looks like real search results

          3) it’s a bunch of crappy smartphone shots of screens

          4) but why would someone work so hard to make these fake images

          5) but AI image generation

          6) but they don’t look AI-generated

          7) but maybe it’s gotten better

          I can go on and on and on

          My ultimate feeling is “this looks legit.” But man. The internet just isn’t fun anymore. It’s so much work.

      • ranger_danger 8 hours ago

        What am I supposed to be outraged by here?

holysoles 12 hours ago

For anyone looking at alternatives, I've been a user of searxng for awhile and have found it to be pretty solid.

  • backscratches 10 hours ago

    Submit a query to a random instance via https://searx.neocities.org (which is set as my homepage).

    • BrenBarn 5 hours ago

      This has the same problem that most public searxng instances seem to have nowadays, which is that they don't work. Either you just get an error about rate limiting or you get results totally unrelated to your search. I just tried a couple random searches about geographical locations (in English) and got back a bunch of results in Chinese.

  • BrenBarn 5 hours ago

    I had been using baresearch.org (a searxng instance) but it's recently become unusable, apparently due to the engines it aggregates cracking down on such things. I tried some other instances but they also don't work. It's a bummer because I thought searxng was pretty great for the last year or two.

  • t0lo 8 hours ago

    i love searx but i wish it could include yandex as well- then it would be perfect- dumb wars

  • mac-attack 9 hours ago

    Mullvad Leta was an engine of choice within SearXNG for my self-hosted instance. Disappointed to see it go.

Taek 10 hours ago

Sad to see it go, at the same time I never used it and it seems that the rationale is highly pragmatic, so you certainly won't find me protesting the decision.

Privacy is an uphill battle, we should use our efforts where they make the most impact.

mkatx 9 hours ago

Damn.. I just learned about this.

t0lo 8 hours ago

fair enough- i used it a few times but brave was just more convenient- also for everyone here brave does its' own indexing and you can downrank and uprank sites and it will remember it without an accout

  • mouse-5346 7 hours ago

    How has your experience with brave been privacy wise? Do they have an advertising network? Do they have sponsored search results or data harvesting?

charcircuit 9 hours ago

>Similar privacy can be achieved through the combination of a VPN and a privacy-focused browser.

Mullvad sell a VPN and privacy-focused browser so how are they unable to proxy the searches themselves? They already have the needed tools developed.

  • culi 4 hours ago

    The browser is free btw and a great browser. Basically Tor without all the Tor protocol parts

  • jdiff 9 hours ago

    A VPN and a privacy-focused browser have similar practical usefulness to a private search engine. They cannot be used to create a private search engine.

    • charcircuit 9 hours ago

      Yes, they can. You use the browser with the VPN to search sites like Bing and then scrape the search results.

      • jdiff 9 hours ago

        You don't need a whole browser for that, just a VPN. And that'd likely get their servers blocked for their users if Google's cracking down on them already.

        • charcircuit 6 hours ago

          >cracking down on them already.

          If they crack down on it then the suggestion to use a VPN and privacy browser won't work either.