Interesting, when I search something reddit has almost always the worst or no answer. Even the spammy tech blogs steal better content.
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Whaaaat!!! Reddit is always better then any other source, aside from the arch wiki and Wikipedia, both of which are... Guess what... Crowd sourced!
It's mostly no replies, deleted comments (why tf do people do that?!), people guessing (which isn't that bad, but why don't they disclose it?) or just pure bullshitting.
There's so much good content out their, but search engines seem to actively punish sites that don't have tracking, bad usability and megabytes of useless javascript.
Now that is unusual
I stay with Andisearch, Whoogle, Metager and DDG (the only proprietary search engine in my collection). Supposing Reddit search is worse than Google, respect privacy, it shares data with Google, M$, and with this with TowerData (keylogging) and others. Reddit is worse than FB, because of this I use Lemmy or Raddle.
+1 for Metager
I think it's generally a good sign for a searcher's privacy, if you look at the adressbar and the search url that shows up and also shows up like that in the history.
For example, if I search with Andi, Whoogle and other search engines that respect privacy, regardless of what I search, only https://searchengine/search
appears in the adressbar and in the history, in all others apears https://searchengine/search/object of the search
which also later apears in the history.
Searching Lemmy
With Brave search in the adressbar and history
https://search.brave.com/search?q=lemmy
Same search with Whoogle
https://whoogle.sdf.org/search
In Andi only apears the url of the Andisearch
https://andisearch.com
With Metager apart of the item, apear the config code
https://metager.org/meta/meta.ger3?eingabe=lemmy&submit-query=&focus=web
All these respect privacy and only stores the history locally, but its better when the search item don't apear in the history, because of this, Whoogle, Andi and Startpage are those which I use most, Metager, DDG and others only in occasions to contrast some information.
Well that seems to be also a result of the reverse. Since normal forums on the open web are dying and more and more content is moved into walled gardens like Facebook or soon to be closed places like Reddit, Google really doesn't have much left to search through.
The better headline would be probably that the open web is dying and as a result Google search results suffer.
That's certainly true, Reddit content comes at the expense of other content.
Yeah pretty much the only way I use reddit these days. Google is terrible if you can't find your answer on the first page. I'd still rather get an answer from a niche forum over reddit, but if I can't find a forum I just slap "site:reddit.com" on there.
Problem is reddit is also bots (if your using the articles dead internet definition). Just blatantly people selling their shit or fake reviews so reddit is kinda losing its usefulness in that respect too. Probably at the same pace as the rest of the internet though. It's harder and harder to find reviews of things that aren't sponsored
And google is the best of the lot, on other search engines the second page is often all the same sites as the first. as is the third.
Related note: if I search site:lemmy.ml it doesn't appear to give content from instances it's federated with. Lemmy might be difficult to search.
We might need a meta-search engine specific for ActivityPub/fedi
I ususally add "reddit" to my search terms when I'm looking for recommendations. At least I know I'm getting crowd sourced opinions and not a stupid ranked list where every company paid for their product to be on it...
Are you sure? You can pay people to post fake reviews on reddit easily, too.
You can get X to do Y for Z. Statement works for literally every thing in life.
Since people already know Amazon reviews are doctored, the next logical step would probably be to pay them to post on reddit. I don't know how your XYZ argument goes against that.
You can also use a subject S, verb V and object O to build English sentences, which works for figuratively any thing in life.
I started doing it like 6 years ago. Maybe I was way ahead of the curve.
Nah, I was right there with you. It's so much better to get recommendations from a hobby/enthusiast subreddit than click bait articles.
I really like Kagi so far. It gives me "early google before they sold out" vibes.
Looks great but the 20-30$ a month is absurd. I'm looking more in the 3-4$ ball park (yearly pricing of course)
I made that very clear to them as well. I said "No way I'm paying more for search than I am for Disney+". They said there will be a pay-per-search option, about $0.01 each IIRC.