- https://duckduckgo.com/?q=southparkuncensored.com
- https://www.qwant.com/?q=southparkuncensored.com
- https://www.bing.com/search?q=southparkuncensored.com
Most other search engines show https://www.southparkuncensored.com/ after searching for “south park uncensored” or “southparkuncensored”, but Bing doesn’t, and therefore DuckDuckGo and Qwant neither.
Source?
Very quick internet search yielded this result: https://kagifeedback.org/d/5445-reconsider-yandex-integration-due-to-the-geopolitical-status-quo/19
Thank you!
EDIT: Okay, reading the replies there it seems like this is a virtue signalling issue rather than something specifically wrong with Yandex search results. Like how some people tried to start a boycott of Proton over a tweet that praised a Trump appointment, or accused Ladybird browser of being “transphobic” because someone tried to discuss gender pronouns in the issue tracker and was told it was not the right place.
Not wanting to financially contribute to a country that’s invaded and has been performing genocide on its neighbor, and has been actively waging hybrid wars on European and US democracies is not virtue signaling.
Also, this.
Ngl I don’t get these people always being like “Source?”
Just look it up bruh it takes less time than to comment
Asking the person who purports to be an expert on the situation to provide some context is much faster than someone who knows nothing about it, like myself, trying to find it.
Source?
Yea, it’s gets to sounding like playground argument tactics “nuh uh!” (which is basically sophistry).
Even when I’m being genuinely curious these days, I try to ask for a source by making it a convo, like “do you remember where you came across that or what should I search for to get good results”, instead of “source?”.