“I found it very weird that there essentially is no way to browse the web in an open manner. So that’s what I am trying to build,” the founder of Stract said.
“I found it very weird that there essentially is no way to browse the web in an open manner. So that’s what I am trying to build,” the founder of Stract said.
For anyone wondering about how they’ll eventually address financial sustainability if Stract takes off:
I’d pay for independent, non meta, ad-free search. I bet a more straightforward approach is more energy efficient as well. In the meanwhile the big tech are running a gazillion processes on our data to suck every bit of wealth they can out of our existence through their free (in it’s littlest sense) products.
You might, but not enough people would to make it sustainable. Neeva was really well loved but couldn’t make the math work.
Haven’t tested it yet, but have seen it mentioned several times here on Lemmy:
https://kagi.com/
Kagi is a meta search engine though. They just do calls to Google, Yandex, Brave, etc. cut the ad rot and sprinkle some secret spice on top.
EDIT: source, https://help.kagi.com/kagi/search-details/search-sources.html
Hmmmm I didn’t know that, every comment that I read, didn’t mention this fact. I’m running my own Searxng instance and Meta engines can be quite powerful, especially when you can adjust them a bit and filter out what you consider “spam” results (e.g. pinterest)
Interestingly the source you linked says that they do have an in-house web index, they just use it alongside other sources rather than using it as their only source
Yes, I’ve seen Kagi mentioned quite often here on Lemmy.
Though Kagi seems Tor unfriendlly maybe.
I use Kagi and love it.