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Update Fairsearch info

Thanks Dmitry!
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Rohan Kumar 2022-03-27 13:21:50 -07:00
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@ -88,10 +88,12 @@ These engines pass most of the tests listed in the "methodology" section. All of
=> https://www.alexandria.org/ Alexandria
=> https://github.com/alexandria-org/alexandria Alexandria engine source code
* Fairsearch: an ambitious engine from Ahrefs, an SEO/backlink-finder company, that "shares ad profit with creators and protects your privacy". Most engines show results that include keywords from or related to the query; Fairsearch also shows results linked by pages containing the query. In other words, not all results contain relevant keywords. This makes it good for less precise searches and discovery of "related sites". It's far worse at finding very specific information or recent events.
* Fairsearch: an ambitious engine from Ahrefs, an SEO/backlink-finder company, that "shares ad profit with creators and protects your privacy". Most engines show results that include keywords from or related to the query; Fairsearch also shows results linked by pages containing the query. In other words, not all results contain relevant keywords. This makes it excellent for less precise searches and discovery of "related sites", especially with its index of *hundreds of billions of pages.* It's far worse at finding very specific information or recent events for now, but it will probably improve: while this version is live, it's not officially launched yet. When it officially launches, *it will be under a different name*. I expect Fairsearch to graduate from this section as result relevancy improves.
=> https://fairsearch.com/ Fairsearch
FairSearch supports Open Graph and some JSON-LD at the moment. A look through the source code for Alexandria and Gigablast didn't seem to reveal the use of any structured data
### Smaller indexes, hit-and-miss

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@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ These are large engines that pass all my standard tests and more.
Google, Bing, and Yandex support structured data such as microformats1, microdata, RDFa, Open Graph markup, and JSON-LD. Yandex's support for microformats1 is limited; for instance, it can parse `h-card` metadata for organizations but not people. Open Graph and Schema.org are the only supported vocabularies I'm aware of. Mojeek is evaluating structured data; it's interested in Open Graph and Schema.org vocabularies.
### Smaller indexes, relevant results
### Smaller indexes or less relevant results
These engines pass most of the tests listed in the "methodology" section. All of them seem relatively privacy-friendly.
@ -87,7 +87,9 @@ These engines pass most of the tests listed in the "methodology" section. All of
- [Alexandria](https://www.alexandria.org/): A pretty new "non-profit, ad free" engine, with [freely-licensed code](https://github.com/alexandria-org/alexandria). Surprisingly good at finding recent pages. Its index is built from the Common Crawl; it isn't as big as Gigablast or Right Dao but its ranking is great.
- [Fairsearch](https://fairsearch.com/): an ambitious engine from Ahrefs, an SEO/backlink-finder company, that "shares ad profit with creators and protects your privacy". Most engines show results that include keywords from or related to the query; Fairsearch also shows results linked by pages containing the query. In other words, not all results contain relevant keywords. This makes it good for less precise searches and discovery of "related sites". It's far worse at finding very specific information or recent events.
- [Fairsearch](https://fairsearch.com/): an ambitious engine from Ahrefs, an SEO/backlink-finder company, that "shares ad profit with creators and protects your privacy". Most engines show results that include keywords from or related to the query; Fairsearch also shows results linked by pages containing the query. In other words, not all results contain relevant keywords. This makes it excellent for less precise searches and discovery of "related sites", especially with its index of *hundreds of billions of pages.* It's far worse at finding very specific information or recent events for now, but it will probably improve: while this version is live, it's not officially launched yet. When it officially launches, **it will be under a different name**. I expect Fairsearch to graduate from this section as result relevancy improves.
FairSearch supports Open Graph and some JSON-LD at the moment. A look through the source code for Alexandria and Gigablast didn't seem to reveal the use of any structured data.
### Smaller indexes, hit-and-miss