There's http://yandex.com . It's great if you want to search controversial subject matter and controversial results that Google wouldn't give you. The reverse image search is also amazing.
The reverse image search in particular is very, very good.
Far better than Bing or Google. It's not obvious why theirs is so terrible, unless that product is not a moneymaker for them, in which case it explains everything.
Big Russian or Chinese software is even more out of the question than the GAFAMs (if they're big, they definitely have authorities messing with the results).
Hmm, what about Baltic or Ukrainian or Israeli search engines ?
Most. Yandex is great, especially for programming searches. It generally ranks GitHub, Stack Overflow and other content-heavy sites highly. Google has been taken over by weird clones of GitHub and SO lately, Yandex has no such trash.
It completely boggles my mind that the useless GitHub and SO clones rank first page on Google. Do engineers at Google not use their own product?
Regarding stackoverflow there is a fair chance they can congratulate themselves:
If I am right they played stupid games and won stupid prizes. More specifically they have allowed rampant deletionism for years so while I am fairly certain the questions and answers originated on Stack Overflow it wouldn't surprise me if a good number of of those aren't visible on Stack Overflow anymore which would explain why they rank higher in Google.
Done right this would actually be a service.
Sadly some of them seems to mix together various questions and answers in the same page to generate text matches for unusual queries.
Thanks. I've got a basic understanding of Russian and have some settings on my phone to read and write in Cyrillic, so I wasn't sure if it was something to do with that or just the way the site works.
French is my mother tongue, but I've quickly learned during my studies that using English keywords in my STEM-related searches would simply lead me to better (and more abundant) results.
A few weeks/months ago however, while I was trying to solve an issue whith a colleague who would search using french keywords, I noticed that some websites featured on the first page of the Google results were off.
In short, they were machine-translated versions of Stack Overflow threads. And they would appear in most of the searches using french keywords.
Those websites also appeared rarely in my searches while I was using English keywords, but most of the time I never bothered opening them. But now I notice them every time.
Some examples:
When searching for "wget set http proxy" on Google, the fourth result leads me to qastack.fr, and the ninth to it-swarm-fr.com, both are websites featuring scrapped and machine-translated threads from Stack Overflow.
When searching deliberately in french for "Eclipse CDT stdout ne s'affiche pas" ("Eclipse CDT stdout not displayed [in console]"), the first result leads me to askcodez.com and the fourth one to qastack.fr (askodez is the same as the other two).
I have never stumbled upon Github clones, yet, however.
One huge help here is uBlacklist, which has filter lists for search engine results. Of course, the Chrome version will be crippled more as Google feels the knife in its revenue artery, so FF is advised!
I read that you can achieve similar results with uBlock Origin, but I indeed ended up using uBlacklist as you can block websites on the go and because it supports multiple search engines. It is working perfectly, one more reason to use FF I guess.
I don't have an example search, although I'll try to remember to update this comment the next time it happens. On average I come across these things at least once a day, but it depends what I'm working on. It tends to be when searching for more obscure bugs, for which there is a GitHub issue but it's not ranked highly on Google for whatever reason, but these spam sites are ranked highly.
GitMemory is probably the most well-known example; it's just a thin layer over the GitHub API with a completely garbage UI, yet it often ranks higher than GitHub itself.
yep it's always a bunch of movie subscription sites instead of the torrent. it's almost like Google's search engine is predominantly focused on collecting advertising dollars...?
Far better than Bing or Google. It's not obvious why theirs is so terrible, unless that product is not a moneymaker for them, in which case it explains everything.