Ask.com shuts down after 30 years, ending one of the internet's early search platforms

Ask.com has shut down, with its website now displaying a notice confirming the closure. The platform stopped operations on May 1, 2026, ending three decades of service. Parent company IAC confirmed it is exiting the search business as part of a change in strategic direction.
From Ask Jeeves to Ask.com
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The platform launched in 1996 under the name Ask Jeeves. It allowed users to type full questions instead of keywords, an approach that set it apart from other search tools of the time. IAC acquired it in 2005 and later dropped the Jeeves identity, renaming the service Ask.com.
By 2010, the company had already reduced the scale of its search operations and moved toward a question-and-answer model. IAC acknowledged at the time that the platform could not match the reach or capability of Google, which had established itself as the dominant player in the search market.
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Why IAC pulled the plug
IAC attributed the closure to a broader refocus of its business operations. Ask.com had progressively lost ground to large-scale search engines and the rise of AI-powered tools that offered faster, more accurate results.
No replacement product or transition plan was announced alongside the shutdown.
What Ask.com leaves behind
Despite its decline, the platform contributed to how users came to expect natural language interactions with search systems. Its conversational query format is considered an early indicator of what is now standard in AI-based search assistants and chatbots.
The service is no longer accessible, but its influence on the structure of modern search interfaces remains a reference point in the history of internet search.







