SearXNG - it's a meta-engine that serves results from a combination of other ones (you can set up which ones you want to use). I like it a lot. Here's a list of public instances: https://searx.space/
Right? So much better it's not even funny. It was recommended to me here on Lemmy a while ago, and I couldn't be happier. Sometimes instances get clogged or go down, but it still beats any other search I tried by a mile.
It will get much worse as soon as the internet had another 3-4 cycles where it has been digested to train LLMs and puked out again by LLMs to shitty websites. Then you have the option to search for that shit traditionally or to use another shitty LLM on top of that
In my case I've found the need to use Google for local searches, and certain very specific searches (one example is journal impact factors). In a lot of other cases, DDG has actually given me better results - I was getting fed up with some of the crappy results I was getting using Google, which prompted me to try out and eventually shift to DDG.
DDG, but ever so often I have to use bangs to Google or some dedicated sites. Been trying out my own instance of the SearchX meta search engine but honestly it's not that much of a difference except it lags. I've been using ChatGPT way more for direct questions instead of using search words and sifting through the results, with the risk of hallucination so still need to double check on important stuff. Copilot sort of works but I don't know why I'm not comfortable with it. Too bad Gemeni seems to be a dud so far. I'd love to see a FOSS language model that can be tweaked for personal interests and custom commands for external APIs and that gives references to the answers.
I've been using kagi for a while now, but I'm not ready to pay for search results. So I'll basically stick with google plus a bunch of excluded terms for the time being, and use the free search contingent from kagi if that doesn't yield and useful results regardless.
I gave yandex a quick run, it's actually very good, functionally, but a privacy nightmare.
Currently trying out Mojeek, one of the few outside the big three to have it's own index. Pretty good - not all the conveniences of the bigger ones but maybe good enough most of the time
I've been using bing for a few years now they kinda got me in when they were paying people to use it and I was also working with Microsoft and wanted to see what was up. its actually not bad. it being the first one to roll out ai was a bonus too. y'all may hate everything I just said but its been working well for me, and in the rare times it doesn't I try others.
I'm using the French search engine Qwant a lot. It's just straightforward and I can muddle through enough French to navigate. I like DDG but the results are middling at best.
I see a lot of duck duck go responses in this thread, my understanding was that ddg is just front ending bing search, it's not a native search itself. Is that right? Is the same true of any of the other ones mentioned here?
Startpage. I know there’s been criticism of the company that acquired them but I believe they gave satisfactory responses to privacyguide’s queries about how they handle user data. Obviously it doesn’t automatically mean they’re telling the truth.
You are wise not to just use one search engine. I use them all to grant maximum results. Ecosia comes close though, it would be my favorite if the thing about planting trees worked, but it's just another Established Titles, minus the ability to say you're a Scottish lord or lady. DuckDuckGo would get an honorary mention too, but as I've said veryoften before for years, its claims of not tracking you show suggestions of being false, as someone with slow internet used to be able to see the tracking links change a few times when you hover your mouse over a link and look at the bottom of your browser. I use them both for their search differences, but in terms of government, they're red flags.