Internet Pioneer Ask.com Shuts Down After 25 Years
🕐 Updated: 2026-05-03 16:30 CST | AI chatbot era claims one of the earliest search engines.
On May 1, 2026, internet search pioneer Ask.com officially ceased operations. Its parent company IAC announced in a statement: “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.”
From Ask Jeeves to Ask.com
Ask.com’s history dates back to 1996, when it launched under the name “Ask Jeeves” as one of America’s first natural-language search engines. Unlike the keyword-based search that dominated at the time, Ask Jeeves allowed users to ask questions in full, natural-language sentences — a concept that has become mainstream in today’s AI era.
The site’s signature feature was a virtual butler named “Jeeves” in a tuxedo, whose image of “answering questions” for users became deeply embedded in early internet culture.
In 2005, the company officially rebranded to Ask.com, but the “Ask Jeeves” nickname remained part of its brand identity to this day.
The End in the AI Era
Ironically, Ask.com’s shutdown comes at the very moment AI chatbots are redefining how search works. As The Verge pointed out, just as Liz Lopatto writes about the “Ask Jeeves-ification of online search” — with AI chatbots increasingly resembling the question-answering butler of old — Ask.com’s original model has quietly exited the stage.
This phenomenon reflects a broader industry trend: the traditional keyword-and-link-ranking search paradigm is being replaced by AI-driven natural language Q&A. ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and other AI assistants have fundamentally transformed how people access information.
IAC’s Strategic Pivot
IAC stated that closing Ask.com is part of its strategy to “sharpen focus on core businesses.” IAC owns multiple business segments including Vimeo, Match Group (dating apps), and Dotdash Meredith (digital media). Against the backdrop of intensifying competition in AI search, maintaining a search engine with steadily declining market share no longer makes economic sense.
Ask.com’s closure is not an isolated event. Just two months ago, Digg’s open beta also shut down, citing AI bot spam. The paradigm of internet search and information retrieval is undergoing profound transformation.
Historical Legacy
Ask.com’s shutdown marks the end of an internet era. From Ask Jeeves in 1996 to its formal closure in 2026, this search engine witnessed the internet’s evolution from an early information retrieval tool to an AI-driven intelligent assistant.
Twenty years after Google came to dominate the search market, AI chatbots are opening a new search paradigm. Ask.com’s demise reminds us that in this rapidly evolving industry, even groundbreaking innovations can be swept away by the next wave of technological change.
Source: The Verge、New York Times