Tumgik
#google search
callese · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
refseek.com
Tumblr media
www.worldcat.org/
Tumblr media
link.springer.com
Tumblr media
http://bioline.org.br/
Tumblr media
repec.org
Tumblr media
science.gov
Tumblr media
pdfdrive.com
280K notes · View notes
erosia-rhodes · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Actual Google results for “World’s Greatest Detective”:
Tumblr media Tumblr media
68K notes · View notes
Text
Let’s start with how hard it is to not use Google. Google spends fifty billion dollars per year on deals to be the default search engine for Apple, Samsung, Firefox and elsewhere. Google spends a whole-ass Twitter, every single year, just to make sure you never accidentally try another search engine.
Small wonder there are so few search alternatives — and small wonder that the most promising ones are suffocated for lack of market oxygen.
Google Search is as big as it could possibly be. The sub-ten-percent of the search market that Google doesn’t own isn’t ever going to voluntarily come into the Google fold. Those brave iconoclasts are intimately familiar with Google Search and have had to override one or more defaults in order to get shut of it. They aren’t customers-in-waiting who just need a little more persuading.
That means that Google Search can’t grow by adding new customers. It can only grow by squeezing its existing customers harder.
For Google Search to increase its profits, it must shift value from web publishers, advertisers and/or users to itself.
/The only way for Google Search to grow is to make itself worse./
- Microincentives and Enshittification: How the Curse of Bigness wrecked Google Search
987 notes · View notes
incorrectbatfam · 10 months
Note
Dick Grayson and Nightwing's last 5 google searches
Tumblr media
1K notes · View notes
cheezitboss · 9 months
Text
google barbie real quick for me
just do it & make sure youre using google
850 notes · View notes
sleepy-bebby · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
4K notes · View notes
headspace-hotel · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
2K notes · View notes
tswiftupdatess · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
'The Albatross'' had its highest peak popularity as a word in Google Search today with a value of 100 in Australia and in the US.
145 notes · View notes
Text
I already knew the answer, but clicked out of curiosity. Google did not disappoint.
Tumblr media
540 notes · View notes
ray-moss · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I think I went to far searching about alastor and vox facts on Google any opinions on this
94 notes · View notes
Text
✿.。.*☆*𝓑𝓪𝓰𝓰𝓲𝓷𝓼𝓱𝓲𝓮𝓵𝓭 *☆*.。.✿
Fun with the BAGGINSHIELDS
Bilbo and Thorin
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Absolute fukkin legends
Tumblr media
81 notes · View notes
faeriereblogs · 26 days
Text
every time i look for smallishbeans on google, I type "Joel". Every time. Without fail. And google's like "man we're gonna need more than that"
104 notes · View notes
ellenkarterempire · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
More naughty me HERE
70 notes · View notes
Text
if poseidon kids get energy by going in the water, do Zeus kids get energy by sitting infront of fans
938 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
117 notes · View notes
Text
The curse of bigness is by no means limited to Google. The other tech giants have each attained gigantic market shares in their respective territories. Even where there is a duopoly — say, the Google/Apple mobile duopoly, or the Google/Meta ad duopoly — growth is more likely to come through enshittification than competition.
Google and Meta don’t want to compete on their respective share of the ad-market, because each one is strong enough to seriously challenge the other. Instead, they illegally colluded to rig the ad market in order to steal from advertisers and publishers, who are soft targets.
Likewise Google/Apple’s mobile duopoly is more cozy than competitive. Google pays Apple $15–20 billion, every single year, to be the default search in Safari and iOS. If Google and Apple were competing over mobile, you’d expect that one of them would drop the sky-high 30 percent rake they charge on in-app payments, but that would mess up their mutual good thing. Instead, these “competitors” charge exactly the same price for a service with minimal operating costs.
But it’s not just tech that faces the curse of bigness: your bank, your insurer, your beer company, the companies that make your eyeglasses and your athletic shoes — they’ve all run out of lands to conquer, but instead of weeping, they’re taking it out on you, with worse products that cost more.
- Microincentives and Enshittification: How the Curse of Bigness wrecked Google Search
88 notes · View notes