I’ve worked at more than one company where chrome thought the internet/internal websites were a phishing attempt due to URL similarity to their public sites… I foresee this causing headaches and confusion.
I mistyped my bank website at an insurance office and locked down the computer. Lady had to call IT to unlock everything again. 16 year old me learned to carefully check the address bar that day.
Of course not.
Google, the search engine, changed something in their config. Now Google apparently looks through each keyword, it’s definitions, and looks specifically for those definitions. Which means if a word has many different definition, Google will probably only return the most popular one, as in the one making the most sense for most users. They could use their “advanced algorithms” to guess what the user actually means, but if they do, it does not work at all. At this point, even Bing/DuckDuckGo and Kagi are better.
The account just needs your email and some password tho. The email could be an anonymous duckduckgo address too. Paying can be done via stripe, Paypal etc. and also Bitcoin.
Why tf would I want a dumb ai to try and second guess my typos?
You probably don’t, but that feature may save some clueless people from getting phished.
I’ve worked at more than one company where chrome thought the internet/internal websites were a phishing attempt due to URL similarity to their public sites… I foresee this causing headaches and confusion.
I would be surprised if there wasn’t any way to manage this at the enterprise level.
I mistyped my bank website at an insurance office and locked down the computer. Lady had to call IT to unlock everything again. 16 year old me learned to carefully check the address bar that day.
I have a feeling people like us are no longer googles target.
I’ll just stick to my lineage os device with mull browser
Of course not.
Google, the search engine, changed something in their config. Now Google apparently looks through each keyword, it’s definitions, and looks specifically for those definitions. Which means if a word has many different definition, Google will probably only return the most popular one, as in the one making the most sense for most users. They could use their “advanced algorithms” to guess what the user actually means, but if they do, it does not work at all. At this point, even Bing/DuckDuckGo and Kagi are better.
I personally would avoid Kagi because it requires an account but that’s just me
The account just needs your email and some password tho. The email could be an anonymous duckduckgo address too. Paying can be done via stripe, Paypal etc. and also Bitcoin.
If I could pay with Monero and it didn’t require a email I would consider it