the example I like to show people is searching "how to fix a leaky faucet"
Kagi shows helpful answers and videos from sites like This Old House.
Google shows ads for plumbers near me. If I had wanted a plumber, I would've searched for that.
I am generally sceptical of GPT results, but also of other results, and GPT search is easier to fine tune and drill down into. For example if it gives me an obviously wrong answer, you can call BS. And it even apologises! Much more difficult to do for search engines.
If you don't want to pay Kagi or login, you can play with it here:
(no need to append "?" when you run queries through that form).
The !fgpt-bang seems to be the model: "Claude 3 Haiku" going by the developer notes. Which often outperforms at least ChatGPT 3.5, easily recouping some of the money I put into Kagi every month.
>Kagi shows helpful answers and videos from sites like This Old House.
>Google shows ads for plumbers near me. If I had wanted a plumber, I would've searched for that.
JFC.
This illustrates one of my biggest complaints about current Google (which has been the case for sometime):
They make their software behave as though they know what I (you) want, better than I do (you do).
So they give you the results they think you need, rather than those you really want.
Infuriating squared.
And idiots cubed.
I'm not sure why my personal results are often so much better than posts like this one whenever I do the experiment - maybe it's based on location?
Correction: I should say, their stupid machine learning algorithms think you need.
When OKRs are tied to revenue, no executive is going to sign off on a change that reduces it
I am in the US, if that matters.
Imagine the community manages to set up a walled off non-commercial web that gains enough popularity to be interesting to advertisers. Who would be in charge of such a thing? And what would they do when Coca Cola showed up at the front door with ten million dollars in a briefcase? Federated would not be much better, they just need to pay the most influential nodes.
If I search "plumber" the first 3 results are ads.
I'm in Australia.