161 points

For a brief moment in the beta for all this, it basically just summarized the top two or three reputable results, and attached a link to where it got the data.

They should have just left it at that, and not started mixing in random blogs and social media sites.
The ability to summarize the Wikipedia article and a random university professors page where they list every fact known to man about pine trees or something was actually helpful.

If I want the AIs best guess about how to fuck up a pizza, I just go to the site where I can ask it. Bad advice when searching is just shit.
A tldr for “what is turpentine” is actually helpful.

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69 points

This reminds me: I need to change my default search engine.

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33 points

SearXNG: poor man’s Kagi (one seemingly reputable instance)

On iOS, I set my default search to DuckDuckGo, and enabled Hyperweb on the DDG domain to redirect to SearXNG. I use a Google Images bookmark saved as a favorite when I need images (SearXNG results inferior even when using Google as the sole engine).

I anecdotally suspect Kagi of astroturfing btw, but after some free trials it seems to be about the best Google alternative - gotta be [earning like] a [US-based] knowledge worker though, or really care about search.

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4 points

I’ve been really liking Kagi. It’s been my default for about 5 months now.

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3 points

ddg image search is superior to Google’s though.

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6 points

I’m kidddddding I’m kidding!

You’ve once again reminded me to properly catalog my comparison searches. Only one I could find in my screenshots:

I start with !ddgi but more than half the time hit it with a !gi bang to go over to the Alphabet Adware Image search. I swear I’m gonna catalog this stuff and then maybe it’ll be apparent:

  • I do weird searches
  • Google is search bubbling me even when I’m private browsing
  • I’m misperceiving the frequency at which DDG image searches actually fail me

Or maybe my use cases are fairly normal and Goog really is superior, TBD!

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1 point

One thing that keeps me coming back to Google is shopping, or searching for online stores, or searching for prices. The shopping tab is somewhat useful and I don’t know any other search engine that does it (because it’s barely a search engine thing tho)

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3 points

you don’t even have to go to the shopping tab anymore… even if you’re just looking for information on something they mix in shopping results right at the top

google is gigantic piece of shit

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54 points

I’m kinda surprised he isn’t bound by some sort of NDA.

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100 points

AI told him he could ignore it.

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21 points

So excited for AI written TOS that are just around the corner.

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15 points

I was just talking to my friend anf his job is going to use AI to parse contracts to understand who is Liable for X, whose responsibility is Y, etc.

So yeah no we’re close.

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2 points

So not only is no one reading the TOS, soon no one will be writing them either.

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27 points

These are all general opinion statements. There aren’t any verifiable facts like, “on this date at a meeting with x we discussed how AI project y is myopic and non-user-centered.”

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22 points

Some companies have you sign things after leaving.

Obviously, when you start laying people off, or do stupid shit like stack ranking, some people are going to walk out and just blab about all the dumb shit your employer does/did - and they’re heroes for doing so.

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1 point

What are they gonna do if you refuse to sign? Fire you?

If this guy voluntarily left, then he wasn’t getting a severance package that they could withhold (and on that note, this is a good reason to include involuntary severence in your employment contract, if you can negotiate it).

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2 points

For many, it’s the severance offered that makes them sign. If you’re about to lose your job, a few months pay, and free relocation back home if your visa is due to be cancelled is likely enough to make you sign something.

I’m not condoning it, at all. I think the practice is fucking disgusting, and have seen it wreck lives, but it’s a reality in many tech companies, including Google under Sundar.

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1 point

NDAs are usually signed when you’re hired, not when you leave.

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2 points

I think that Amazon and Meta (where this is a known practice) do both. I’ve not signed anything in tech that stops me talking about internal company practices or any work that might have resulted in “voluntary” dismissal, but others in these companies that do the Jack Walsh thing and fire their employees do…

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12 points

Every tech company I worked at, NDAs were a doc to not share code or research discoveries.

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2 points

https://jenson.org/about-scott/ He did work at google, so at least hes not lying

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44 points

Yeah that’s what happens when you throw your engineers out for business majors at a tech company

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43 points

It told me today that Harvard did research to show 165 degrees killed H1N1 in milk. The reference? Recommended cooking temp for chicken.

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