this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2024
106 points (92.7% liked)
Fediverse
28574 readers
371 users here now
A community to talk about the Fediverse and all it's related services using ActivityPub (Mastodon, Lemmy, KBin, etc).
If you wanted to get help with moderating your own community then head over to !moderators@lemmy.world!
Rules
- Posts must be on topic.
- Be respectful of others.
- Cite the sources used for graphs and other statistics.
- Follow the general Lemmy.world rules.
Learn more at these websites: Join The Fediverse Wiki, Fediverse.info, Wikipedia Page, The Federation Info (Stats), FediDB (Stats), Sub Rehab (Reddit Migration), Search Lemmy
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I recall there is a federated search engine... somewhere. Anyone know what that was called.
Are you thinking of YaCy?
Ah, I wondered if something like that had been tried before. Looks like it is maybe still running: https://yacy.net/
The demo isn't giving me useful search results.
There's only been about 700 yacy peers online in the last 30 days which is pretty low for a "crowd sourced" search engine, especially when many of those are, I think, temporary peers that come and go. It looks like it has only maybe 200 "master" servers which wouldn't be nearly enough to keep up with the Internet these days.
The good news is that if there's websites / urls that you care about you can point your own yacy instance at them and schedule the crawls to keep up with content changes.
I remember reading about yacy some years ago and now that I've bumped it into again it's sparked my interest. I may stand up a docker instance and play with it for awhile. If nothing else it could make a very useful "arrrrr" search engine.
I ran an instance for a while out of curiosity a few years back - building the database seemed to work fine and appeared like a good idea, had a lot of fun to see the connections with other servers and my crawler filling holes of unknown spaces. But I think the search algorithm itself was (most likely is) not sophisticated enough, it just did not give relevant results often enough, and it was extremely vulnerable to very simple SEO tactics to push trash to the top.