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Ask.com Shuts Down After Decades: 'Every Great Search Must Come to an End'

Last updated: 2026-05-03 06:32:51 · Gaming

Breaking: Ask.com, the one-time Google competitor once known as Ask Jeeves, has officially ceased operations as of May 1, 2026. The decision comes as parent company IAC sharpens its focus, ending 25 years of question-answering service.

“Every great search must come to an end,” reads a farewell message posted to the site. “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.”

The message thanks users, engineers, and designers, adding: “Jeeves’ spirit endures.” The closure marks the end of a dot-com-era titan that struggled to keep pace with Google.

Background: From Ask Jeeves to Ask.com

Ask Jeeves launched in 1996 and went live in 1997, quickly gaining a loyal following for its conversational butler interface. In 2006, the company dropped the Jeeves brand and rebranded as Ask.com, though the move failed to dent Google’s dominance.

Ask.com Shuts Down After Decades: 'Every Great Search Must Come to an End'
Source: www.pcgamer.com

Internal development of search tools ceased in 2010, and the site largely faded from relevance. Despite serving millions over nearly three decades, Ask.com never matched Google’s market share, often being likened to “Burger King to Google’s McDonald’s.”

The farewell message cites exactly 25 years of operation, though the company’s exact timeline is debated. Founded in 1996, Ask Jeeves would have turned 30 in 2026, but IAC’s statement rounds down—possibly referencing the 2001 acquisition spree or the 2006 rebranding.

Ask.com Shuts Down After Decades: 'Every Great Search Must Come to an End'
Source: www.pcgamer.com

What This Means: A Relic of the Dot-Com Era Fades in the Age of AI

The shutdown underscores the brutal realities of the search market. Ask.com’s original pitch—a conversational, natural-language butler—is uncomfortably similar to today’s AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Google Bard. But Ask never evolved to compete with modern AI.

For many “geriatric millennials,” Ask Jeeves was a fond memory of the early internet, often unblocked by school filters. Its demise feels like a sign of the times: a pioneer that couldn’t adapt as artificial intelligence rewrites the rules of search.

“Jeeves will return in Avengers: Doomsday,” the farewell message quips, referencing a pop culture crossover. But for now, the search engine that once asked “Do you have a question?” has itself answered its final query.

The closure marks the end of an era, but also a lesson: even nostalgia can’t outrun innovation. As IAC focuses on other ventures, Ask.com’s legacy lives on in the way we now expect conversational search—a promise made by a butler two decades ago.