Ask.com Shutdown
New Delhi: The search engine that once let you ask questions in plain English has gone dark for good, and the internet feels a little older because of it. Ask.com, the platform that millions once turned to for answers, went completely offline on May 1, 2026, drawing the curtain on a journey that stretched nearly 30 years.
What began as a bold experiment in how people could talk to the internet has now become a piece of digital history.
Ask.com came to existence back in 1996 and was well ahead of its time. While most search tools of that era required users to punch in a handful of keywords and hope for the best, their platform, originally named Ask Jeeves, took a very different approach. It invited users to type full questions in everyday language, the way they would ask a real person for help.
That concept sounds completely normal today, but back in the mid-1990s, it was genuinely fresh. Ask Jeeves was essentially the early blueprint for what we now call conversational search, a format that AI assistants like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude AI have taken to a whole new level in recent years.
The platform refurbished itself in 2005, when media conglomerate IAC stepped in and acquired Ask Jeeves. Along with the acquisition came a rebrand. The friendly butler Jeeves was retired, and the platform was relaunched simply as Ask.com. Five years later, in 2010, the company made another major pivot, moving away from traditional search results and repositioning itself as a question-and-answer community, not unlike Quora.
In an official message for its users, IAC, the current company of Ask.com, said, “As IAC continues to sharpen its focus, we have made the decision to discontinue our search business, which includes Ask.com. After 30 years of answering the world’s questions, Ask.com officially closed on May 1, 2026.”
One other reason sighted was the rapid growth of AI-powered search tools. Modern users no longer need a dedicated Q&A website when they can get instant, detailed answers from AI chatbots. The very thing that once made Ask.com stand out, which was natural language questions, has now been absorbed and perfected by technology it simply could not compete with.
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