Official developer documentation for Bing Search Services. Learn how to build web-connected apps and services that find webpages, images, news, videos, and more without advertisements.
This is a very low-information announcement here but if this is taken to the extreme, it means that DuckDuckGo, Qwant, and many other so-called "alternative" search engines are going to either have to look for a new provider of results, or die.
Shiiit, I really don't want to go back to Google and all their sponsored/AI/tracking bullshit. Any other privacy-focused search engines out there that don't rely on this?
Yeah I'm far too used to getting my search for free to pay for it. I'll fuckin' use chatgpt before I pay a subscription fee for that shit, even if it is a substantially better option.
I looked at it briefly, the only free option I saw was 100 free searches, which will not last your average user anywhere near 30 days. Shit that might not last me 3 days depending on what I'm doing.
Not unless you have some way to get me a free lifetime membership, cause I've already made it pretty clear I'm not paying for it, and it wouldn't even let me use it without making an account when I checked it out.
It's less that I'm unhappy with the answer and more that I'm confused about why you would give an answer that I've already said I won't use. But if screaming into the void is your jam then you do you.
If you tell the o3 reasoning model to just search the web and give you the top results instead of answering your query it can actually be really useful for obscure queries. I was able to find specific spec sheets for my model of monitor when a google search would only produce the specs for basically any other model the manufacturer made. Even with the model number in quotes
I admit I haven't tried it myself, but I've heard it's a thing, apparently? shrug But I've noticed in my other uses that they're a lot better about citing sources for their claims now, so I guess you could just go 'Hey what's the capital of Vermont?', ignore its answer, then click on the source link below it, and voila: search engine?
My point was more: is this just the way things are going to go, we're going to get funneled into using AI for everything whether we want to or not?
Yeah I've been using duckduckgo for a few years now and loving it, I really hope it doesn't go away. Still waiting to hear from those guys about how this affects them.
Is that something built into the browser? i dropped Brave when I heard Google was forcing the adblock-gimping shit in Manifest V3 into Chomium. Also I was never entirely keen on their crypto-hawking bullshit.