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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)PI
Posts
2
Comments
150
Joined
2 wk. ago

  • Yeah, that's a big one. Have you considered Here Wego? Its european and integrates TripAdvisor reviews (yes, US I know. Still better than feeding Google Imo). It doesn't have everything but for restaurants and POIs it usually has the info you need if you live in a bigger city.

  • I understand your view. It's just, I don't see what other choice they have/had.

    Search engine backends are remarkably scarce, and very expensive to run. And if you're trying to build a front-end search engine today, you're pretty much limited to:

    • Google (US)
    • Bing (US)
    • Baidu (China)
    • Sogou (China)
    • Mojeek (UK)
    • Yandex (Russia)

    Between these choices, and before the US decided to become a fascist state, realistically which of these engines made more sense to pick? Being honest. US tech has always been seen as trustworthy and the golden standard for all things tech, until very recently.

    Sure, they could also use metasearch engines, but those are remarkably consumer-UNfriendly and would require tweaking beyond the capabilities of the common tech company.

    The only thing I cannot explain here is why they didn't use Mojeek as their backend, and here we can only speculate..

    Maybe it would have made Ecosia financially inviable if they had to pay for their API. Maybe they were concerned Mojeek's finances were too uninspiring compared to the colossal capacities that Google/Microsoft have.

    Or maybe they thought people didn't want to have a radically different experience in results from what they are used to, and so decided to basically just give these two platforms a green makeover and promise to plant some trees. I don't know.

    My point is, I wouldn't necessarily hold it against them. If anything, I am glad they agreed to join forces with Qwant in building a true EU-based search engine. Its sad that it took us so long to realise we need the basic infrastructure that other big economies have, but I suppose better late than ever.

    I'm optimistic.

  • Why would Europeans pick small US businesses to shop? Do Americans give priority to buying from small EU businesses? No.

    You buy from the US first, big or small, and only then do you look for alternatives outside if something doesn't exist in the US (which means, never).

  • Because it doesn't matter if its big or small. If it's American, it pays taxes in the US, it's boycotted.

    Do you think the current US regime is being selective about the size of EU companies that are being hit by their unwarranted tariffs? Of course not.

    Nor will we.

  • Well, maybe you don't understand the context of the OP, but we Europeans are leaving US tech behind due to your current president starting an unwarranted trade war with all of the US's (former) allies.

    I was praising you, or any american really, who's sabotaging the current administration instead of just living life as usual. That's how my comment follows.

  • Are you me? Lol. Ever since I started bootinf Linux (through a standard speed pendrive, mind you) I barely boot into windows.

    In fact, I'm pissed whenever I accidentally boot into windows because windows is too the automatic option when booting, haha. I foresee that changing very very soon.