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Deleted member 199
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Exactly.How can there be too much bacon.
as we all know the correct answer to “how much bacon would you like” is “yes”.
Exactly.How can there be too much bacon.
Also, if you hate being advertised to, Apple buying them would probably be an improvement. DDG has to make a profit still and used ads to do that.
Apple already offers a bunch of internet services and people pay for those services.
They only get their results from Bing, not Yandex. The knowledge graphs are powered by Wikipedia.DDG results are from a combination of Bing and Yandex. The info boxes (eg if you search for “noodle soup” and get specialised recipe boxes or whatever) are from their own scraper but the general results are not.
Exactly.
as we all know the correct answer to “how much bacon would you like” is “yes”.
Apple already offers a bunch of internet services and people pay for those services. I see no reason they wouldn’t approach this the same if they did it. Maybe a basic mode for free and iCloud/Apple one sub to get more features.
Because I want a search engine, not an advertising vehicle where I’m the product.
Three words: “uBlock Origin” and “uMatrix”. I don’t use a browser without them.
Like I said, maybe the basic usage would be free like the 5GB iCloud plan is free.But search is so integral to computer use now that to charge openly for the search tool would feel like having to pay for a MacOS like we did back in the day.
But search is so integral to computer use now that to charge openly for the search tool would feel like having to pay for a MacOS like we did back in the day.
So, if a hypothetical company offered search that wasn't Ad based (e.g the Apple buys DDG idea) and instead is paid for by either subscription, or subsidised by hardware costs, or whatever, you don't want to use that because "megacorp".
When a company repackages results from a different "megacorp" and relies on ads to make a profit, you just mention an ad blocker?
It almost sounds like you just want to talk about how "big companies are bad" and "ads are bad", but aren't actually interested in any potential solution for the perceived problems of ad based business models.
This is my entire point.No. I don’t wish to use it because it isn’t a search engine so much as an advertising engine.
Bitch please. I was using dialup and altavista in the fucking 90s. I'm kind of tired of your ridiculous assumptions about other peoples' view points.I also recognize how you have, at best, only the faintest memory for searching information without “megacorp” participation or searching information without the obfuscating layer of SEO being injected into the stack.
Please, first try re-reading what I've actually written, and then if you still come to the same conclusion, try reading it with a fucking dictionary in your hand.It almost sounds like you just want to talk about how big companies are benevolent and kind, and ads are also good
You have made it patently clear you don't want to pay for a search engine, and you're not happy with advertising-funded search engines.
I’d gladly pay for a not-for-profit search engine which ignores all SEO tags if that path were available. Give me a SIRSI for the world both within and outside the academic realm.
There's literally only two options left: a company like Apple that invests heavily in their "product ecosystem", even when some aspects of that ecosystem are not necessarily profitable (e.g. Apple Maps: it's completely free to use, it must cost them fucking millions to run, given the amount of data they've captured using their own staff/contractors, to provide a better solution).
I'm suggesting that if they were to do it, it could be completely ad-free, and it may or may not have paid tiers, like iCloud does, for additional features.
Paying for a copy of Mac OS X gave us — the users — a better, more stable, better supported, and more open* operating system with virtually none of the tracking, telemetry, and compulsory fortress walls hard-baked into all the “free”, annualized revisions to have emerged since.
You’re getting what you (don’t) pay for when you voluntarily hand over your whole digital self to a corporate body which profits from knowing as much as they can about you, the user, and which cares as little as possible about your participation in shaping that process.
Bitch please. I was using dialup and altavista in the fucking 90s. I'm kind of tired of your ridiculous assumptions about other peoples' view points.
Please, first try re-reading what I've actually written, and then if you still come to the same conclusion, try reading it with a fucking dictionary in your hand.
Your ability to misunderstand or misconstrue what others are saying is off the fucking charts.
Good luck with whatever it is you're trying to prove, I'm done here.
Counterpoint:
Paying for a copy of Mac OS X gave us — the users — a better, more stable, better supported, and more open* operating system with virtually none of the tracking, telemetry, and compulsory fortress walls hard-baked into all the “free”, annualized revisions to have emerged since.
You’re getting what you (don’t) pay for when you voluntarily hand over your whole digital self to a corporate body which profits from knowing as much as they can about you, the user, and which cares as little as possible about your participation in shaping that process.
* and by “open”, I mean to say the community is better able to check and report on the security and integrity of source code in an open dialogue with the software developer(s)
Is there something you've seen that makes you think any of the "data collection" done by Apple is used for profile building/monetisation?I think we can't say that if we were still paying for a MacOS (or say for the apps in what used to be sold as iWork), "everything else" including tracking, analytics data collection etc would not have proceeded apace.
Is there something you've seen that makes you think any of the "data collection" done by Apple is used for profile building/monetisation?
Capturing crash/usage reports is not the same thing as capturing your personal details and using that data when showing you ads.
Sorry, I misunderstood - you mentioned "including tracking, analytics data collection etc would not have proceeded apace" and I thought somehow you were suggesting Apple is using data collection as an alternative to charging actual money.No, I'm not saying that at all.
Sorry, I misunderstood - you mentioned "including tracking, analytics data collection etc would not have proceeded apace" and I thought somehow you were suggesting Apple is using data collection as an alternative to charging actual money.
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