Popular 90s search engine ‘Ask Jeeves’ finally bites the dust — parent company shutters website that pioneered natural language queries, only a placeholder resu

Popular 90s search engine ‘Ask Jeeves’ finally bites the dust — parent company shutters website that pioneered natural language queries, only a placeholder resu

The online search valet is finally retiring after 30 years of serving up answers to our millions of questions.

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When you visit Ask.com, you can read the company’s final statement: “As IAC continues to sharpen its focus, we have made the decision to discontinue our search business, which includes Ask.com. After 25 years of answering the world's questions, Ask.com officially closed on May 1, 2026,” Ask writes. “To the millions who asked… We are deeply grateful to the brilliant engineers, designers, and teams who built and supported Ask over the decades. And to you—the millions of users who turned to us for answers in a rapidly changing world—thank you for your endless curiosity, your loyalty, and your trust. Jeeves’ spirit endures.” The original AskJeeves.com page still appears to be online, and you can still get some results of a limited scope.

Despite being older than Google by a couple of years, Ask Jeeves wasn’t able to compete against it or Yahoo!, which soon became staples of internet search in the 2000s. Yahoo! itself is still surviving, although it has convincingly been left in the dust by its rival, which has since become an all-encompassing tech giant and a leader in the AI race. Ask Jeeves follows in the footsteps of Alta Vista , another '90s search engine that fell victim to Google’s groundbreaking PageRank algorithm.

You may like Clippy, Microsoft’s hapless Office assistant, was retired 25 years ago today Amazon's Rufus AI shopping assistant can be easily jailbroken and tricked into answering other questions News outlets are blocking Wayback Machine from archiving their pages Ask Jeeves stood out from the competition because it let users search using natural language queries — i.e., asking it questions like you’re talking to another person instead of using keywords and Boolean operators. This is how many AI-powered search engines run nowadays, and Ask Jeeves achieved that (to some extent) without using a large language model.

But it seems IAC is no longer interested in keeping Ask.com alive and is completely shutting it down. The company didn’t pivot towards AI, data centers, or semiconductors, something done by other companies … even ones that aren’t even tech-related, like struggling shoemaker Allbirds and Japanese toilet-maker Toto . Nevertheless, this might be a fitting retirement for the search-engine valet — after 30 years of serving up answers online, it’s time Jeeves rested up and rode off into the sunset.

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