Ask HN: Is it just me or did Google search recently get a lot worse?
188 points| alan_wade | 7 years ago
I'm not the kind of person who thinks about search quality, this is the first time in my life I have ever noticed it being frustrating.
188 points| alan_wade | 7 years ago
I'm not the kind of person who thinks about search quality, this is the first time in my life I have ever noticed it being frustrating.
einr|7 years ago
For instance I just now searched for a specific e-mail address that ends with "@hotmail.co.jp" -- since it didn't find any hits with the full address, it decided to strike out the username part and return thousands of results for just "hotmail.co.jp". This is literally useless and they should know better.
It just gets worse and worse for technical searches too, I find. Searching for stuff like datasheets for chips and vintage obscure computer programs and peripherals rarely returns anything useful without "wrapping" "everything" "in" "quotes".
icebraining|7 years ago
Alternatively, if you can edit the URL used by your browser, you can just add "tbs=li:1" to it; for Firefox, you can add it as an alternative Search engine by running this on the Console:
This doesn't invalidate the overall point, of course, it's just a personal tip.kazinator|7 years ago
PostThisTooFast|7 years ago
[deleted]
guhcampos|7 years ago
I always used image search to try and find the original source of an Image. It's super useful to determine the authenticity of a news article, identify the author of a photo for licensing and a million other uses.
Then at some point, search by image started to simply return results based on the image classification tag on the image: so instead of similar images, or other instances of a photo, I get results like "beach" or "bicycle" or "city". This is so frustrating and completely useless. I'm sure anyone is capable of typing "mountain" in the search field to find generic photos os mountains.
So that got me back to tineye.com - I just with they had a larger coverage of the web =[
EForEndeavour|7 years ago
seventhtiger|7 years ago
There aren't many tools that find exact/slightly transformed matches of an image. That was very valuable, especially with the power of Google's webcrawling. Imaged get shared, stretched, watermarked, and artifacts build up. This was the single best way to find a source image.
Now the image is converted back into text and it searches for images using the text. We could search for images using text before. This is not new. The unique thing about reverse image search was killed and turned into just a fancy input for the same old image search.
jkollross|7 years ago
Timucin|7 years ago
For some reason, it keeps recommending the videos I already watched, the ones in my save for later and the most annoying one: the ones from the channels I marked as not interested.
My recommendations also getting less and less relevant.
They definitely changed something and broke a perfectly working system.
NeedMoreTea|7 years ago
"recommended for you", yeah right. How do they arrive here from say 1 from CGP Grey, 2 from ACDC and 1 from Iron Maiden?
Last.fm used to have my music taste well nailed and followed up with a lot of unknown stuff that I ended up loving and buying. YT had more data for longer yet has no clue at all. Now I just search and play direct from DDG.
YT never worked that well for me, but now it's rarely worth even checking the other videos column.
palerdot|7 years ago
nihil75|7 years ago
pjc50|7 years ago
Also they need to stop reccomending flat earth, anti-vax and other toxic nonsense without prompting.
pure-awesome|7 years ago
I assume it must have improved in that time; maybe I should try it again.
SquareWheel|7 years ago
zython|7 years ago
Youtube's recommendation has really changed for the worse.
saiya-jin|7 years ago
buboard|7 years ago
the_other_guy|7 years ago
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keiferski|7 years ago
samwhiteUK|7 years ago
DarkWiiPlayer|7 years ago
tinus_hn|7 years ago
It seems just stupid to return these completely useless results but I guess it makes them money somehow.
Yetanfou|7 years ago
natch|7 years ago
It allows (allowed?) you to tell the search that the other words can be used for ranking and are nice-to-have words, while the must-include words are treated differently and must be present and match exactly.
If all search terms were automatically must-include with no override, search results would be garbage because as a user you aren’t going to predict the perfect inflected forms of words used in documents every time.
Being dumbfounded should not lead you to think other people are wrong. It should lead you to wonder what you are missing.
Jedi72|7 years ago
quickthrower2|7 years ago
charlesism|7 years ago
brazzledazzle|7 years ago
I suspect that the people who’ve noticed this and feel frustrated have, like me, been searching on Google since back when it was on its way to unseating Altavista/Yahoo/etc (or maybe somewhere between). But I don’t hold it against Google because they’re optimizing for the widest possible audience and if it makes it easier for most people I’m ok with being a little inconvenienced. As long as adding quotes or other modifiers kicks in the old/advanced search I’m ok with that price for something I not only don’t pay for, but don’t click on the ads for either.
pure-awesome|7 years ago
saluki|7 years ago
I'm seeing my search results show less and less of what I'm looking for, it's like google search is forgetting how it used to work.
The same with SEO, I'm seeing sites ranking again on the first page that have useless content using all the tricks/ghosts of SEO past. It seems all the legacy SEO hacks/tricks filters that had been in place at Google have been removed recently.
I was a huge fan of Google, but I'm definitely seeing a decline in quality of the SERP.
quickthrower2|7 years ago
Yetanfou|7 years ago
[1] https://github.com/asciimoo/searx
whateveracct|7 years ago
ur-whale|7 years ago
Two possible explanations:
1. The latter is much more of a moneymaker.
2. I don't think there is anyone left at Google that actually understands how the search engine works these days.
enz|7 years ago
s9w|7 years ago
synesso|7 years ago
EGKW|7 years ago
apatters|7 years ago
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19111306
A Search Quality engineer at Google responded to me but I didn't find their arguments very convincing (nor did a number of repliers).
I have switched over completely to Searx on most of my devices, and by telling it to weight results from Bing, DDG and Google I feel I get better results than from any of those search engines alone.
hallihax|7 years ago
Jefff8|7 years ago
twic|7 years ago
r_singh|7 years ago
Google has been returning really obvious results that one expects to get based on search history, other internet usage, etc (much like Netflix's matching). So much so that in order to find really unexpected gems of info I need to really spend a great amount of time searching a lot of different websites (hacker news, reddit, linkedin, corporate affairs data, marketplaces, truecaller, etc etc).
I feel like we need a new search engine now that there are so many different types of search results (blogs / media, aggregators / marketplaces, directories, social profiles, company websites, etc). One that lets us take more control over the type of results one can expect and more importantly one that doesn't show you what you expect to see (after being heavily influenced by your previous activities).
Also, Google may have millions of results for every keyword, but the quality of those links deteriorates quite fast, post 3rd page results are just crap.
I genuinely believe that Google worked and innovated when other search cos were wasting users' time by not rendering results quickly, but today we need something that better suits the complexity of the web and doesn't heavily rely on usage histories, etc.
thiago_fm|7 years ago
x38iq84n|7 years ago
pi-victor|7 years ago
Granted search engines are no psychics, you also need to better phrase your searches sometimes.
I remember Google used to return way more accurate results a few years ago. I guess privacy regulations, increasing demand for higher ad revenue have made it a lot worse than it used to be.
brudgers|7 years ago
Because no one wants to wait forever (delay is indistinguishable from failure), Google returns the best results it can obtain within some time threshold. Unfortunately, the utility of a search term is often its rarity relative to other search terms and the rarity of a search term makes it less likely to be cached nearby. If "nobody ever searches by that term" it is more likely not to be indexed or on a far away partition. Think of adding a Korean character to a string of English search terms : In Korea : In the US.
xorand|7 years ago
fergie|7 years ago
untangle|7 years ago
jim-jim-jim|7 years ago
anc84|7 years ago
shash7|7 years ago
Unfortunately, duckduckgo and the like aren't still as good as google else I would've shifted to those search engines a long time ago.
segmondy|7 years ago
qnsi|7 years ago
(I know of firstround search and I think this is the best you can get. I was thinking there should be a website that aggregates articles linked on twitter by people from VC/founders world, but I don't think there is one sadly)
BidCoins|7 years ago
nullandvoid|7 years ago
luord|7 years ago
belltaco|7 years ago
buboard|7 years ago
growlist|7 years ago
dennisgorelik|7 years ago
Several search queries took 2-4 seconds to return results.
e9|7 years ago
qbaqbaqba|7 years ago
dfgert|7 years ago
operatorequals|7 years ago
SquareWheel|7 years ago
kowdermeister|7 years ago
What are you searching for when you see a decrease in quality?
kowdermeister|7 years ago
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trumped|7 years ago
paulcole|7 years ago
RyanUnited|7 years ago
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Reimersholme|7 years ago
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WhooisWhoo|7 years ago
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the_other_guy|7 years ago
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tannhaeuser|7 years ago
unknown|7 years ago
[deleted]
isostatic|7 years ago
> 99% users of this website are software engineers
Citation Needed