• UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    like Kagi is doing

    I haven’t seen much to suggest Kagi’s results are better than Google’s. But that’s as much a function of time and horsepower as anything.

    I would argue that the private model is what’s fundamentally wrong with modern search. Nationalize Google and make it a public utility, like any public library or publicly financed research institution. Open up the front end source code and let people apply their own filters and modifications, rather than locking everything down to force feed you sponsored content.

    That’s the only real way to fix search.

    • dan@upvote.au
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      4 months ago

      Nationalize Google and make it a public utility, like any public library or publicly financed research institution.

      This would be great. Running a search engine is very expensive though.

      The Internet Archive is probably the closest thing we’ve got to something like this. It’s a non-profit but AFAIK they don’t get any government funding. They’ve got the scrapers and could probably work on a search engine project, but I doubt they could afford it in their current state. They’re spending a lot of money at the moment due to companies filing lawsuits about Internet Archive archiving their content (and a bunch of content is gone from the archive forever as a result

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Running a search engine is very expensive though.

        The federal government spends about $1.3B a year on advertising and another $37.5B on data collection, with Google being a major recipient of both budgets. Nationalization would save a small fortune.

        And for the economic tailwinds that efficient Internet research provides, I’m willing to bet we’d see significant economic benefits that eclipse the base cost, not unlike with Amtrak or the USPS.

        The Internet Archive is probably the closest thing we’ve got to something like this.

        Them and Wikipedia, definitely. Both make for excellent models of non-profit free-at-point-of-use information services.