this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2025
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Technology
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Search engines are already basically worthless, so I'm not surprised with the falling axe.
The shift from search engines actually indexing things to search through to trying to parse a question and find an answer has been the most irritating trend for me. I remember when you could just put in a series of words and be delivered unto every indexed page that had all of them.
Now I regularly get told that even common words don't exist if I insist that, no, google I do want only searches with the words I put in.
This is my old person rant, I guess. /s
This change is probably going to cause huge problems for a lot of existing sites, especially because it means Google will probably start changing their advertising model now that they can consolidate the views into a specific location and pocket the money. The article mentions this, but doesn't realize the implications.
"The internet will still be around," is only true if you hold that the super consolidated, commericalized nexus of doom is going to continue on just fine, while countless small, very useful websites made by actual people for actual reasons fade away into oblivion.
It sucks to watch something I have loved my whole life die, but it's going bit by bit because we can't convince our politicians to do anything about it.
I think Google is doing this specifically because of the anti trust trial against their ad monopoly/monopsony.
Like they’re clearly loosing the trial and that means they’re probably going to have to sell off parts of their advertising company, or at least massively alter how they operate to end the anti competitive practices.
It used to be that Google made money on every user, even if they left the site, because they served all the ads on every other site as well. Now that they won’t be making money that way, so they don’t want people going to other sites anymore.
Isn't this site proof that the internet doesn't have to die as a whole? I mean, I agree with your sentiment, but I feel that this will mostly hit the middle to high traffic sites. The community based ones with organic discovery will remain OK I think. This might even evolve back to an early internet age of smaller hobbyist sites because there no longer is big money in the internet (apart from what google captures as "their" internet)