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Ask.com shuts down search business after decades

The platform, originally launched as Ask Jeeves, was known for allowing users to type full natural language questions.

byKerem Gülen
May 4, 2026
in Industry
Home Industry
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Ask.com, formerly known as Ask Jeeves, has officially ceased its search business as part of parent company IAC’s strategic refocus. A farewell message on the Ask.com homepage stated, “Every great search must come to an end,” and thanked the teams who built the platform over the years.

The closure marks a significant turn in IAC’s operations, ending its consumer search endeavors under the Ask brand. Ask Jeeves introduced users to a functional approach where they could type full questions in plain English, distinguishing itself from other search engines that relied on simple keywords.

Founded in 1996 by Garrett Gruener and David Warthen in Berkeley, California, Ask Jeeves gained prominence during the late 1990s. It went public in 1999, handling over a million queries daily and competing with services like Yahoo and AltaVista.

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The rise of Google significantly impacted Ask Jeeves’ competitiveness. Despite acquiring Teoma in 2001 to enhance its search results, Ask struggled to retain relevance as Google’s PageRank algorithm provided superior results. IAC acquired Ask Jeeves in 2005, rebranding it as Ask.com in an attempt to modernize the platform.

By 2010, Barry Diller indicated that Ask.com could no longer compete effectively with Google. The platform then transitioned to a question-and-answer community model, which managed to sustain operations for another 16 years, although it never regained its former prominence.

As search technology evolved, the core premise of Ask Jeeves—natural language searching—saw a resurgence in modern AI applications. Despite this, the shutdown of Ask.com signifies the end of an era for IAC’s search ventures, with no indications of future plans for the Ask.com domain or its related properties.

The closure serves as a reminder of the rapid consolidation within the search engine market post-Google’s ascent, leaving it as the sole dominant search brand among its early competitors.


Featured image credit

Tags: ask.com

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