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I'm afraid this is a case of "too little, too late". I've been a happy DDG user for many, many years. Sure, there's a learning curve when venturing out of google's cozy bubble. But once I figured it out, its been fantastic.

Except the last few months. And, I can't stress this enough, its not DDG's fault. The results are relevant to my search, and at first glance seem to be what I'm looking for. But take more than 2 seconds to read, and you'll notice the websites themselves are trash heaps of AI slop, serving errors and mistakes.

The human web is quickly shrinking out of existence. The last content silos of human expression have walled themselves in and are striking deals with the evil megacorps; pushing their shitty, error prone, planet killing, word prediction engines down everyone's throats.

Soon, there will be nothing of value left for Kagi to index. Maybe they should pivot to web autopsy tools, not unlike Internet Archive. I wish the Kagi team well. I hope they succeed. And I really hope I'm wrong about the open web's grim future. But I'm probably not. And the AI arms race suggests the megacorps agree.



> Soon, there will be nothing of value left for Kagi to index.

We have something in the works to fight back on that front, do not be worried ;)


> Soon, there will be nothing of value left for Kagi to index.

1. The Internet Archive

2. Anna's Archive

3. YouTube (if they're allowed to)

That's more than enough knowledge and information.


4. Wikipedia

Am I too optimistic?


Great comment and you are absolutely right: AI slop content will (ironically) kill AI search.

In my opinion, we have gone full circle and arrived back to human curation to provide quality search results.


I don't think your post is without merit, but I often search for things where there's a single canonical source of truth, and no amount of AI slop or LLM results will be of interest. (e.g. this afternoon I've searched for a book title, for YouTube Premium pricing info, for git bisect documentation, for car collision stats, for speeding fine amounts, for some Linq documentation, and for some specific info on local parking).




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