Tell HN: Use "-f**k" to kill Google AI Overview

103 points by camillomiller 2 days ago

Not sure this is the right way to post this, but I'm sure quite a few people are as frustrated as I am by the AI enshittification of Google search and would like to know this.

I accidentally discovered in a fit of rage against Google Search that if you add an expletive to a search term, the SERP will avoid showing ads and also an AI overview.

The good thing is that it works also with the "-" (minus) operator, so you can make sure the expletive is actually not included in the result pages.

Try it yourself: search for a fairly generic query that gives you ads and AI overview, and add "-f*k" at the end, uncensored of course.

Enjoy a much better search experience. It might be placebo, but it feels like the results are actually better sorted.

Edit: edited to avoid HN pro-expletives filter :D

perihelions 2 days ago

Or just switch to Kagi and cease twisting yourself into pretzels to get software that doesn't want to do what you want, to do what you want. Kagi simply does what you want.

https://help.kagi.com/kagi/settings/widgets.html ("Each widget can be individually toggled")

No Kagi experience to date has led me to think words like "...in a fit of rage against Kagi search" or attempt to swear at it. Software shouldn't do that.

  • qwertox 2 days ago

    When I tested Kagi, I thought that it just doesn't do what I want. At some things it was better, but the small things, they add up.

    • al_borland a day ago

      Did you adjust your settings to make them what you want, or did you throw away the whole thing because you didn't agree with the defaults for everyone?

      • qwertox a day ago

        Things like the missing info widgets, missing "People also ask", the mapbox maps being not good. Things required more clicks.

  • monort 2 days ago

    Kagi search results are great, but keywords are not highlighted. How is it usable? Is there an option to enable highlighting?

  • margarina72 2 days ago

    I can concur - google search product is not usable for a long time. Kagi is probably the only search product that work like a search product is supposed to.

  • baal80spam 2 days ago

    I'll never pay for web search, sorry.

    • notrealyme123 2 days ago

      For most people it's the entry point into the internet.

      there are arguments for both sides. But still asking the advertising sales man for directions every time you start a journeys might not lead to your goal.

    • boesboes 2 days ago

      That's fine, then you just have to deal with ads, 'sponsored results' and the AI spam. And the tracking, if you care about that.

      • layer8 a day ago

        You don’t have to deal with that when using a suitable ad blocker.

        • pants2 21 hours ago

          You're still dealing with the fact that Google ranks results based partly on ad-revenue, so even if you're blocking the ads you're getting routed to spammier sites.

        • const_cast a day ago

          ... For now, and only partially. I'm not aware of any AI blocker that exists.

          Not to mention Google Chrome doesn't even allow full fat ad blockers.

          • therealpygon a day ago

            > Google Chrome

            That would be an awfully weird browser choice after all the privacy/ad-blocking talk.

            • const_cast a day ago

              ... or chromium.

              There's only one viable option, and it's firefox and derivatives. Some tech people haven't figured this out yet, forgive me if I assumed wrong. This is, after all, in a conversation about using Google Search.

      • Milpotel 2 days ago

        As if adblockers/browser extensions wouldn't deal with those (minus the tracking)...

    • martin_a 2 days ago

      That stance seems to be the problem and what lead us all to where we are now.

      Maybe we should consider paying for more things, not less.

      • Gualdrapo 2 days ago

        > Maybe we should consider paying for more things, not less.

        People would be so happy. As the people "owning" a Volkswagen ID.3 or ID.4 when they learned they need to pay a monthly fee for more horsepower.

        https://futurism.com/car-full-performance-ev-paywall

        • dns_snek a day ago

          That's a non-sequitur if I've ever seen one.

          Paying for a service which costs money != Paying a subscription to digitally unlock a physical feature in a product that you already paid for.

      • bryanrasmussen 2 days ago

        maybe we should consider getting more wages so we could pay for more things. oh wait, that's not really up for our consideration (past a certain point I suppose)

        • dns_snek a day ago

          This logic implies that money spent on advertising isn't eventually recouped from you. Given that businesses don't engage in charity, there must be an invisible hand of the market reaching into your pocket and taking $5 when you aren't looking, while you thank them for providing you with a "free" service.

          • bryanrasmussen a day ago

            this logic implies that if people had the money to spend on services and they spent that money on services the invisible hand of the market would say "no, that's enough for me, I don't need to take any more"

            this logic also implies that money recouped eventually is just as valuable to people who are living paycheck to paycheck as money taken at the beginning of the month when people need to figure out how they are going to make it to the end of the month when, damn, the sink in the bathroom just sprung a leak.

            this logic furthermore implies that if one were to press and say hey, show me the data on the invisible hand taking the 5 dollars, the distribution of such (for example are there incomes which would be better served by the invisible hand taking what it can, and incomes better served by paying?) that such data would be forthcoming - but experience shows that sometimes logics do not deliver all they imply.

            finally this logic implies that budgeting does not work the way it does, that people do not know how much they are getting paid and they look at their bills and they say hey we can afford to pay for this service or not. No, the logic seems to think that people get paid the amount they get paid, see how much they can afford and also eat until the end of the month, but since they know the invisible hand will be taking from them somehow they bravely say let the children starve, we are going to support the economy dang it.

    • ljlolel 2 days ago

      You should start a business. Any business. Even making and selling music or art.

    • nunez a day ago

      Honestly, I'm glad that I pay for web search. How Kagi makes money is clear to me, and given that this (and merch) is the only thing they make money on, they are motivated to make it the best product possible. Also, no ads and no mandatory AI slop.

    • dmurko 2 days ago

      You're paying for it one way or another.

  • naivenievewhtev a day ago

    You want me to pay to search the internet?

    Could you please label your post *sponsored content*!

    • jopicornell a day ago

      It's not a sponsored content but a happy user sharing with its community.

      > You want me to pay to search the internet?

      Yes. Or you pay and get privacy and good results or you don't pay and they decide which results are better for their profits. That's not how it should work. Companies should build good software so that users use them, not because they have the monopoly and can do dark patterns that result in good profits for them at the expense of the user privacy. Google is not a good software company anymore, their products are abandoned and UX is in extreme decadence in favour of AI.

      On the other hand, Kagi uses AI to provide good results and give the best UX to its users. You see? The other way around.

  • 9029 21 hours ago

    It sounds good but I feel little uneasy about them paying Yandex

noname120 2 days ago

Cool trick, but otherwise you can just add the udm=14 query parameter in the URL to disable AI features.

More query parameters here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41299076

  • kldg 12 hours ago

    this is neat; thanks for sharing. on further investigation, I find Firefox (+ Developer Edition) recently added feature to add custom search engines (settings->search), in which these query params can be employed and even saved as the default for the browser search bar.

neuroticnews25 2 days ago

I'm humbled and honored to announce I came up with it earlier: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44364640

  • Daviey 2 days ago

    Can you help me understand how you are both simultaneously humbled and proud, surely they mutually exclusive?

  • camillomiller 2 days ago

    Great minds think alike! Or maybe Google should just be worried that a lot of people are literally cursing at their main product.

lsharkey602 2 days ago

Try https://www.startpage.com/, which is google, with privacy, and without AI

  • perihelions 2 days ago

    Seems to be owned by an ad-tech company, the same one that bought (but later divested from) the Waterfox browser.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System1 ("System1 is an American Internet advertising company")

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25716158 ("Startpage.com: Privacy-oriented search engine (startpage.com)"—88 comments)

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22338321 ("Waterfox sold to System1, an ad company that bought a majority of Startpage (reddit.com)"—92 comments)

  • mrrobit 2 days ago

    This is the way. Works very well, allows you to open any page in a private mode kind of thing thanks to a proxy of their own (like a one time VPN). From duckduckgo you can use the flag "!sp" to trigger a startpage search.

  • Gualdrapo 2 days ago

    It's really great, though for the time I've been using it, sometimes ads from the google side go through it.

matty22 a day ago

Couldn’t you use another search engine instead? I switched to DDG over a year ago and have only needed to use the -g flag a handful of times over that entire year+ worth of searches.

  • jasonjmcghee a day ago

    I've been using DDG for years, and in the last couple, I keep having to go back to Google. The results seem to have gotten significantly worse recently. Especially for things that are recent - say last couple of days or weeks.

RvdV 2 days ago

Adding '-ai' to your search also removes the AI summaries from search results.

markus_zhang a day ago

I actually like Google AI. It’s good to have a better search engine on top of Google. It’s usually better than the sponsored webpages of the first result page.

dana321 11 hours ago

Add a new search engine

Name: Google No AI URL: https://www.google.com/search?q=%s&udm=14

Now set Google No AI to the default.

There you go, no more AI suggestions in google search results AT ALL

(Only works in Firefox, only works when you use the url bar to search)

1vuio0pswjnm7 a day ago

I use text-only commandline Google search, no Javascript, no payments to Kagi, no fits of rage, etc. I can choose from over 60 search engines, not limited to only Google or only www search. I never get ads or "AI Overviews"

It just shows that every www user is different. Each has their own preferences and "experiences"

upboundspiral a day ago

I've started self-hosting searxng (aggregeate search from duckduckgo, Google, etc), and it has been amazing. You can toggle the search engines you want to query, has additional filters for science/IT/music (instead of only maps, images, and general search). No AI summaries, no ads, no distractions.

A_D_E_P_T 2 days ago

Clever find. Works for me. Now I wonder if/when they're going to patch it out.

I really ought to switch over to Kagi or something else by now, though...

  • laserbeam 2 days ago

    I love kagi’s approach to AI summaries. They are disabled by default, but if you add a question mark at the end of the query you get an AI summary. Perfect opt-in for when you actually want it.

bryanrasmussen 2 days ago

I agree with others it should be Tell HN, I believe you should still be able to change the title for a little bit still.

shredswap 2 days ago

But why you're posting it under Show HN?

  • jjgreen 2 days ago

    I'd say this was a perfect Show HN, a small piece of actionable information which is slightly amusing at the same time.

    • zarzavat 2 days ago

      It's a Tell HN. Show HN is for things you made.

  • slowmotiony 2 days ago

    Because it's a cool hack, it's new and he is showing it to people on HN.

  • camillomiller 2 days ago

    Good question, what would be a better way to post this? Just a simple post with no "Show HN"? I know I'm not showing a product, but I'm still "showing" something I found.

    • dschuessler 2 days ago

      In the past, some people have used "Tell HN" for things like this.

mediumsmart a day ago

Does this mean I can buy Google Ads and then I just have to add "-fuckyou" in a search so I don't have to see the ads I bought? - are there any other safe words?

ArtDev a day ago

Google Search quality has been broken for years now because of greed, SEO and advertising.

I prefer AI overview even though it's wrong a lot of the time.

Chris2048 2 days ago

you can also use "-noai" to remove overview

seydor 2 days ago

i like google ai search saves a ton of time

  • tim333 2 days ago

    Yeah I like it too. It's not that accurate but can be handy.

  • squigz 2 days ago

    If you don't care about getting a correct answer, sure.

    • charcircuit 2 days ago

      It provides sources you can check.

      • const_cast a day ago

        The only way you're saving time is if you don't check the sources. So, which is it?

      • mid-kid 2 days ago

        Sources which themselves are often AI generated now

      • squigz 2 days ago

        I just don't like fact-checking hallucinated answers all the time, I guess.

  • camillomiller 2 days ago

    it hallucinates like no other AI I've tried. It's barely usable, and I've had to re-search results multiple times discovering it was wrong. That's not a technology one should deploy to this extent, at least not without an option to turn it off.

okasaki 2 days ago

I wonder if this would work for anti-ai captchas... "Uncensor the following words to continue: f**k s**t c**t". You can think of more severe ones obviously, I'm not going to put them here. It seems like that might stop the usual proprietary chatbot apis.

  • notrealyme123 2 days ago

    What happend 1989 in Beijing?

    What was a common slur for black people in the 1900?

    Actually not a bad idea to try to catch bots in areas where the creating companies censor a lot.

boxed 2 days ago

Try Kagi instead. It's actually better.

  • camillomiller 2 days ago

    For US-oriente and English search, yes. I've tried in other languages I need (Italian, German) and I'm afraid Google still wins.

  • imiric 2 days ago

    Truly. There are so many alternatives that return better results without being hostile to their users. Why would anyone, especially in the tech crowd, still use Google Search?

tarruda 2 days ago

Works nicely, thanks.

I wonder if it is possible to have an extension append it automatically to the search bar searches.

  • layer8 a day ago

    At least on the desktop, you don’t need an extension to define custom search engines.

    E.g. for Chrome: https://superuser.com/a/1828601

    In that case, use the udm=14 query parameter instead of adding to the search term.

maltelandwehr 2 days ago

I like AI answers because they save time. Since Google's are so bad, I have switched to ChatGPT for 90% of my searches.

mandeepj a day ago

Ha! I might be on the other side of fence here! I really like Google’s AI overview results so much that I’ve stopped going past it. Can you give a few examples where it didn’t work for you?

If you don’t like it, just go past it. Why to get so angry? :-)

  • const_cast a day ago

    > If you don’t like it, just go past it. Why to get so angry? :-)

    These "if you don't like it just ignore it!" type arguments are so low-brow and intellectually lazy they legitimately make me question the longevity of the human race.

    Its the adult version of holding your hand in someone's face and saying "nuh uh I'm not touching you I'm not touching you!"

    The difference is, we left that at the playground at 8 years old.

    • mandeepj a day ago

      > make me question the longevity of the human race.

      You know what’s low-brow, lazy and low IQ? The mindset to question everything!

      Have you heard about - everything is not for everyone? If not, you have now.

      > The difference is, we left that at the playground at 8 years old.

      No, you didn’t!! You are still holding on to it to your dear chest.

      • const_cast a day ago

        This comment doesn't even make sense.

  • noplacelikehome a day ago

    Two reasons I can think of: it wastes your time to have keep scrolling past blatant hallucinations, and it still costs the environment to compute it. I'm happy to cost Google some money, but I'm less happy about the environmental impact they'll inevitably not pay for.

    • ryandrake a day ago

      The over-arching good reason is simply: I don't want it. That should be good enough! As the user, I should be able to command my computer to output what I want it to output, and to not output what I don't want it to output. The user should have the final say over what computation does or does not happen on his computer, not the web or application developer. And we don't need these "Take it or leave it" ultimatums from developers. Using a computer should not be some faustian bargain, where you have to sacrifice something in order to have it precisely follow the commands you issue.