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Ex-Google ad boss builds tracker-free search engine

bbc.co.uk

21 points by beermonster 3 years ago · 11 comments

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bediger4000 3 years ago

I'm happy that Mr. Ramaswamy is atoning for advertising. I noticed neevabot crawling a website I have access to just the other day. I have been trying to prevent SEO bots like AhRefs, Screaming Frog & etc from crawling and indexing my websites out of spite. SEO is a big part of why the web kind of sucks.

Minor49er 3 years ago

The search engine is called Neeva [1]. It seems to be pretty advanced already. The results are responsive and accurate. I was surprised that they offered a maps feature, but this appears to be Apple Maps

One thing that surprised me is that searching for "php strpos" revealed not just the PHP docs for the function as I expected, but actually has the sections of the page visible in the first result, as well as a succinct code snippet in the description. The text does get cut off with no way to scroll, but still, having the function signature at a glance is really cool

[1] https://neeva.com/

  • btdmaster 3 years ago

    I like the 90 day limit to all automated signed out data storage in the privacy policy[0], but I'd love to know if there's anything unreasonable someone else can find in it.

    [0] https://neeva.com/privacy

  • uni_rule 3 years ago

    The only thing it does wrong (imo) is clutter the home page with attempts to sell itself. Not having a clean landing page is ironic for a product made by a disgruntled Google employee.

gardenfelder 3 years ago

I observed that on some searches, it seems to get stuck in a loop, repeating earlier hits over and over again on subsequent pages. It seems to me that agood search engine should, at the very least, do something to trap repeats.

vlugorilla 3 years ago

Their privacy policy is a Nightmare. Literally says they send your search queries to Microsoft. Lol.

lgats 3 years ago

   And almost all - but not the BBC - had at least one belonging to Google, meaning Google is receiving anonymised information about users visiting those pages.
BBC.com and BBC.co.uk both run google ads via DoubleClick and thus have Google trackers.
lapinot 3 years ago

aka "Tech exec says he has remorse of building a bad plateform, says the new one will be better and really nothing like the previous one". What a joker! Either they play dumb or they really don't understand the mechanics of how big internet plateforms work. If they want to show off their immense knowledge and experience they should contribute to community projects. There are tons. Only this can produce a qualitatively different result.

cityzen 3 years ago

16 years raping your privacy and now he raises $77 million to try to make up for it. What a story.

  • warinukraine 3 years ago

    A number of years ago we've reached a point, at least in my mind, that the mention you used to be at Google counts as a negative.

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