Meanwhile, Down Under
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wrote on 22 Jan 2021, 13:12 last edited by
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wrote on 22 Jan 2021, 13:22 last edited by
There is always Bing, DuckDuckGo, Yahoo!, etc.
Multi site subscription services like Apple News also has some search capabilities.
The Chinese can also step in with Baidu, Qihoo, Sogou, etc. -
There is always Bing, DuckDuckGo, Yahoo!, etc.
Multi site subscription services like Apple News also has some search capabilities.
The Chinese can also step in with Baidu, Qihoo, Sogou, etc.wrote on 22 Jan 2021, 13:28 last edited by@axtremus said in Meanwhile, Down Under:
There is always Bing, DuckDuckGo, Yahoo!, etc.
Multi site subscription services like Apple News also has some search capabilities.
The Chinese can also step in with Baidu, Qihoo, Sogou, etc.They will also need to pay the royalties, presumably.
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@axtremus said in Meanwhile, Down Under:
There is always Bing, DuckDuckGo, Yahoo!, etc.
Multi site subscription services like Apple News also has some search capabilities.
The Chinese can also step in with Baidu, Qihoo, Sogou, etc.They will also need to pay the royalties, presumably.
wrote on 22 Jan 2021, 13:36 last edited by@doctor-phibes said in Meanwhile, Down Under:
@axtremus said in Meanwhile, Down Under:
There is always Bing, DuckDuckGo, Yahoo!, etc.
Multi site subscription services like Apple News also has some search capabilities.
The Chinese can also step in with Baidu, Qihoo, Sogou, etc.They will also need to pay the royalties, presumably.
Yes, assuming the Austrian parliament goes through with the legislation, there will be search engines willing to try doing business following those new regulations, and we can observe how that works out for all parties involved (news gatherers, news distributors, the search engines, the consumers). Let them do that experiment down under, we observe and learn as we contemplate our own experiments.