What unsolved problems would a next-gen search engine potentially address?
What if you could have a conversation with a search engine, asking follow-up questions within the context of the previous ones?
* Confidence ranks you can interrogate. "Why did you rank high?"
* on the fly refinement of specific hit terms. "Find more like this"
I think uBlacklist is a good implementation.
Braves proposed “goggles” is better, but as yet I don’t believe there are any implementations of it. [2]
[1] https://github.com/iorate/ublacklist
[2] https://brave.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/goggles.pdf
Search engines that filter out websites that don’t follow a certain code of conduct.
Search engines that are local to a certain area.
Search engines that are completely open-source.
It should still feature search that finds websites or categories in the directory, but also allows to explore from these points and discover related content.
User-definable ranking and exclusion criteria would be great.
In the past few weeks on HN we've seen articles on:
- How universally reviled autoplay video is. Excluding sites which do this from SERPs would be a strong incentive.
- Paywalls and privacy invasions, similarly.
- Known SEO-baiting sites, e.g., Pinterest and Quora.
- Excessive JS.
- User-hostile designs.
Simple site quality and reputation would be a huge factor for me. I've increasingly taken to searching specific sites rather than general Web search just to be able to cut through the crap.
Suggesting filters to apply might also be of interest --- say, "X filter returns / removes Y results".
As noted in an earlier comment: establishing a self-indexing search standard, which would allow websites to create their own indices, and for those to be distributed to multiple search platforms. (Yes, cheats would need to be identified, and mechanisms for establishing reputation determined.)
Better metadata search, and inclusion / exclusion by category, would be great. Search exclusive to scientific, technical, or academic sites, or exclusive of commercial, paywall, erotic, gaming sites, for example. (Such filters could of course be reversed if that was your kink.) Inclusion/exclusion of social media is probably another big one.
Tools for leveraging site-specific search more cleanly, inspired by DDG's Bang! searches, might also be interesting.
Really good date-ranged search. Google still beats DDG at this, though DDG can at least filter by past day/week/month/year, which is useful.
Search inclusive of the Internet Archive's Web and other holdings would also be great. A search not just of Web space but of Web time.
A true news / magazine archive search.
Governmetnt records searches.