When Did Google Search Become Totally Useless?
Why bother with making information accessible and usable if you can tell people what you want them to hear instead?
It’s no secret that our news and information sources have become overwhelmingly controlled by a handful of powerful corporations. These tech giants make their fortunes by monetizing your data, tracking your every click, and crafting search algorithms that shape how you see the world. In the process, your privacy vanishes, and your choices shrink. But what if it didn’t have to be this way? A new player, Freespoke, is offering an alternative, taking a stand against Big Tech with a bold vision for a fairer, more private internet.
Freespoke is one company offering solutions to these problems and pioneering a path away from Big Tech/Google’s monopoly on information. Return sat down with Kristin Jackson of Freespoke to discuss her company’s solutions to these problems in today’s online information environment.
'Every dictator in our history has known that if they can control information, they can control their people.'
The people at Freespoke noticed a considerable amount of media bias in mainstream search engines like Google. It is most likely impossible to eradicate this issue, so Freespoke does the next best thing: It labels media bias while also highlighting “multiple viewpoints.” Freespoke labels content “left, right, and middle,” but it also has alternative labels such as a “faith label” and an “independent label.” Freespoke seeks to level the media bias when you search for your news: “We've added an element to make sure you're getting different viewpoints in your search results.”
It also makes it easy to find controversial topics on the search engine since the developers know that those topics may be the most skewed to one point of view. For example, they've made it very easy to find stories surrounding elections: “We focus [on election information] because we know election-related information is an area where people aren't sure Google is telling them the full story.”
Another hallmark of Freespoke is that it “prioritizes American-made businesses” to give it a chance to fight against its biggest competitors. The developers want to support “that American ideal of a small business owner being the backbone of an economy.” They see this as a key to revitalizing the American economy from the bottom up: “We don't have strong national supply chains because we just haven't been supporting our small business owners and haven't been making sure they can get in front of a population and sell their goods.” This part of the search engine is beneficial for bringing American businesses to more people’s attention.
That’s not all Freespoke has to offer. It is also a pornography-free search engine, making it safe for all ages. Jackson said they weren’t initially sure how they would make this a reality, but then they just decided, “Let's just not show pornography.” From “day one,” they did not have porn on their search engine.
While these are all great search engine features, Freespoke “built a search engine based on privacy.” Privacy was the defining element of their vision for an alternative search engine.
“I will tell you that as a company, we believe protecting your privacy is important to you — it’s important to us and should be important to you. And in Freespoke, you can know from day one, as long as we exist, that we are going to stand by that principle of protecting your privacy.”
What sets Freespoke apart from other third-party search engines that offer privacy? Not only is it fully committed to protecting your privacy, but it also offers a bias labeling service that provides a more even playing field (not to mention being porn-free and emphasizing American companies). You get the best of both worlds with its service, as the website says: “Freespoke is here to show you what other search engines won’t and protect your privacy in ways they refuse.”
Freespoke is offering an alternative vision for the future of search engines. It must offer bias labeling and data protection since both issues are important to address in today’s media environment. There is also a more pressing issue that the developers are trying to combat. Freespoke understands what happens when one person or group controls the information for a person, and it never ends well:
“Every dictator in our history has known that if they can control information, they can control their people. And so we have to make sure one organization does not control our information.”
These days, the web is a painful place. Click on any random link, and chances are you’ll be taken to a bloated page full of pop-ups, prompts, disclaimers, and intrusive ads. If the page has any useful content at all, you’ll likely have to wade through a swamp of annoyances to extract it. But even more likely, the random web page you’ve clicked will be full of thin, useless content. Or even worse, the text was written by ChatGPT and not even skimmed by a human before publication.
Things didn’t used to be this way. Back in the halcyon days of the 1990s and early 2000s, the web was a weird and wonderful place. Web pages were created by hobbyists who wanted to share their interests with the world. They didn’t care about search engine optimization or marketing funnels. You honestly had to surf the web to find what was out there.
Long before Google hit the scene and conquered the open web, almost everything on the internet was word of mouth. Search engines existed, but they were essentially useless. Instead, you had to dig through a web directory to find a site you liked and then visit the sites they linked to. It was almost 100% human-curated, even before someone had thought of that term. A single page might cover a multitude of topics, and they were littered with all sorts of low-resolution buttons for various causes.
Back then, the web was weird, wild, often bewildering, and very much human. Then along came Google and Web 2.0, and slowly, over time, websites became clean, minimalist, topically focused, and sterile. What had been a wild frontier morphed into a suburban shopping mall, and now it feels like a rundown shopping mall in the bad part of town.
Unfortunately, that weird and wild frontier web is long gone. Or is it?
If you want a little taste of that old-time internet, head over to wiby.com. Wiby is a search engine dedicated to preserving and resurfacing the original web. As Wiby’s creators explain:
In the early days of the web, pages were made primarily by hobbyists, academics, and computer savvy people about subjects they were personally interested in. Later on, the web became saturated with commercial pages that overcrowded everything else. All the personalized websites are hidden among a pile of commercial pages. Google isn't great at finding them, its focus is on finding answers to technical questions, and it works well; but finding things you didn't know you wanted to know, which was the real joy of web surfing, no longer happens. In addition, many pages today are created using bloated scripts that add slick cosmetic features in order to mask the lack of content available on them. Those pages contribute to the blandness of today's web.
The Wiby search engine is building a web of pages as it was in the earlier days of the internet. In addition, Wiby helps vintage computers to continue browsing the web, as pages indexed are more suitable for their performance.
Wiby is a search engine, but it won’t replace Google for your everyday searches. It indexes only a very small number of classic websites, and the results may not be what you expect. But that’s not really what Wiby is for.
Don’t know what to search for on Wiby? Click “surprise me ...” and you’ll be taken to another weird and wonderful destination, like:
With Wiby, you feel as though you’re truly surfing the web again, and you can easily kill an afternoon clicking through random sites. It’s a reminder that the internet doesn’t have to be a bland, sterile place chock full of bloated pop-ups and marketing copy. There is still very much a human internet out there. You just have to escape the safe confines of Google to see it.
If you enjoy what Wiby is doing to preserve the classic web, consider giving them a donation to help cover their costs.