For the past year or so, I’ve been using and enjoying the search engine Kagi.
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@CptSuperlative Ah, I just use the super-sophisticated technique of closing tabs all the time and then searching my history in desperation.
@inthehands @CptSuperlative closing tabs


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@lunareclipse @inthehands You are right about privately held companies. In both cases, it comes down to what the owners/shareholders want, and that is usually profit.
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@qqmrichter @inthehands I did not intend to say maximizing profit was a good thing. I believe it is not. I only wanted to highlight what can be realistically be expected, and that is that the profit motive dominates corporate behavior (especially for, but not limited to, public companies). That is what shareholders want.
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@briellebouquet@queer.party @JessTheUnstill Yes. Fascists actively fuck semantics. That’s their game.
What I want is a framing that says human rights are •not• open for debate, but they •are• open for advocacy. No, not just “open for” — advocacy is a requirement, not an option. It’s normal. It’s just what we do.
That’s the needle I want to thread. Thinking not of fascists, but of the muddly middle: not paying attention, hesitant to engage, imagining they’re on the sidelines.
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@briellebouquet@queer.party @JessTheUnstill Yes. Fascists actively fuck semantics. That’s their game.
What I want is a framing that says human rights are •not• open for debate, but they •are• open for advocacy. No, not just “open for” — advocacy is a requirement, not an option. It’s normal. It’s just what we do.
That’s the needle I want to thread. Thinking not of fascists, but of the muddly middle: not paying attention, hesitant to engage, imagining they’re on the sidelines.
@briellebouquet@queer.party @JessTheUnstill There’s a particular sort of person, whom I’ll unfairly call the “upper midwestern archetype” in a jab at my home state, who could really go either way: fascist or anti-fascist. They’re malleable. They’re deeply conflict-averse. They just want something that’s easy to agree with.
I want active defense of human rights to be that super-normal thing that’s easy to agree with.
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@inthehands @qqmrichter 1/ Good article, but it focuses on what the academic says OUGHT to be true (a “return to managerialism”) with greatly constrained shareholder rights. I’m no economist, but that doesn’t sound good for small investors, especially since pensions have disappeared. The article explicitly supports my claim that shareholder value is today the dominant force…
@inthehands @qqmrichter 2/ My grandfather was CEO of a Fortune 1000 company from the mid-50’s to early 60’s. The BoD wanted to move manufacturing from Jersey City, NJ to Mexico. My grandfather resisted, saying it would cause major job loses in Jersey City. He argued that the company had a moral duty to support the community. The BoD said it hurt profits (which was true). When he defied the BoD, the company fired him. They moved the plants. The jobs were lost.
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@inthehands @qqmrichter 2/ My grandfather was CEO of a Fortune 1000 company from the mid-50’s to early 60’s. The BoD wanted to move manufacturing from Jersey City, NJ to Mexico. My grandfather resisted, saying it would cause major job loses in Jersey City. He argued that the company had a moral duty to support the community. The BoD said it hurt profits (which was true). When he defied the BoD, the company fired him. They moved the plants. The jobs were lost.
@inthehands @qqmrichter 3/ The BoD represents shareholder interests. CEOs work for the BoD. Even if a CEO is on the BoD, the CEO has a fiduciary duty to shareholders. Unless the CEO controls a voting majority of shares, the BoD rules. I was founder and CEO of an early stage company and learned this the hard way.
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@inthehands @qqmrichter 1/ Good article, but it focuses on what the academic says OUGHT to be true (a “return to managerialism”) with greatly constrained shareholder rights. I’m no economist, but that doesn’t sound good for small investors, especially since pensions have disappeared. The article explicitly supports my claim that shareholder value is today the dominant force…
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@briellebouquet@queer.party @JessTheUnstill 100%. This X-er thing you’re talking about just makes me apoplectic with rage. The South Park effect.
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Thanks. This just worked for me too.
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For the past year or so, I’ve been using and enjoying the search engine Kagi. Its search results are…fine, no worse than others, and it’s ad-free, stated privacy as a primary goal, and seemed to have a better ethical sense than its competitors.
Or so I hoped.
1/
They also seem to be losing the war vs content farms, and that is only going to get worse in the next few years.
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Which is it? Doesn’t matter.
When I give a company access to all of my searches, I’m giving them an •extraordinary• degree of trust. Earning that trust from me requires a keen ethical awareness, and a sense of responsibility that never shrinks into the shadows and says “Not our problem! Not our responsibility!” when market forces raise ethical questions.
I want a company with a moral compass and a spine.
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> I want a company with a moral compass and a spine.
Hear hear. And *both* are needed. I've seen companies that have learned to pretend they have a moral compass (because they've had their PR RLHFed into knowing what to say), but no spine in that they don't do anything meaningful to align with their empty words. -
@inthehands "Pants-on-head-stupid" is a phrase I plan to steal. Thank you!
And thanks for the warning about Kagi.
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@glightly@mastodon.social @CptSuperlative I like the idea of community-curated directories. It may be an idea whose time has come again.
Still, I really do need •search• for my daily life: an esoteric error message while programming, a book whose title I can’t quite remember, a question about some scientific fact…no amount of community curation can do that. Both and!
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@ChildlessBambino@mastodon.green @cschack @flowerpot @inthehands
so many options, so little clarity...you'd hope that each one of these companies would have a link on their homepage with large bold text like: "how we make our money and what our business motives are".
in the case of qwant, i have to do a web search to find that they answered this on a forum: https://help.qwant.com/en/docs/overview/how-does-qwant-make-money/
it's ads.
so the motive to track (and rank bad results higher) will eventually creep in.
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@glightly@mastodon.social @CptSuperlative I wish I had a nice way to do that to hand to you on a platter, or to invite you into! I am hopeful that the Internet is tilting back a little bit more toward being community-driven like this, so here’s hoping….
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Search is a wasteland right now. Alas. And there are no good choices.
But look, if I’m going to •pay• a company money for search, it needs to be a company run by ethically mature people. If and when Kagi is run by such people, maybe I’ll give that paid plan another go. For now, well, maybe these childish people will blunder their way to maturity and maybe they’ll just blunder, but either way, they won’t be doing it on my dime.
/end
@inthehands “Search is a wasteland right now.“
I’ve switched to perplexity. No idea if they’re ethical but in a set of poor choices they save me a bunch of time.
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@meltedcheese @inthehands the legal requirement to maximize profit over everything only applies to publically traded companies btw. If you're not on the stock market the goal is whatever the owner decides.
Granted yes, the incentive is still there and basically we can't have nice things under capitalism.@lunareclipse @inthehands @meltedcheese also, "maximize shareholder profits" is not actually a requirement. It's a theory not based on any actual law. Many rich and powerful people do benefit from pretending it's a requirement, though
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@inthehands I just got inspired to meme by this awful statement.
@morix @inthehands Politics is stifling innovation in cotton farm personnel management. --Confederate leaders, probably
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@CptSuperlative
What are the groups and workspaces, how do they work? You're another person I see mention them, and as I use Firefox I'm not familiar with the terms.Personally I tend to use technique of "topic per window", makes it easier to clean up when I'm done with this topic/task.
@inthehands