DuckDuckGo now lets you hide AI-generated images in search results
51 comments
·July 18, 2025jurgenkesker
I recently opened Pinterest after a year or so, and did look for some nice architecture / houses, and all results had the tag 'AI enhanced'. No I don't want AI houses, I want to see real architecture! Even though the tags are there, you can't filter on 'No AI'. So I stopped using it again.
platevoltage
I never understood Pinterest and how it works, but I know that people who DO understand and use Pinterest are basically saying that it’s been completely ruined by AI images.
elashri
Wait, are you telling me that before LLMs, this was the good version of Pinterest?
This is the most common blocked site on ublacklist lists and kagi and probably it is also on many of the common dns blocklist.
threetonesun
It was mostly ruined by ads/SEO spam many years before. AI is probably the final nail in the coffin for any of the users who appreciated its original appeal, which was basic image curation from mostly blogs.
al_borland
It seems most sites that allow user generated content, and allow images/video, have been ruined by AI.
Before long we’ll need a second internet just for real people, as this internet will just be all bots and AI content. Dead internet indeed.
Or better yet, maybe I can get some real hobbies outside of tech.
gilleain
Cara (cara.app) has images - art, photos, etc - that are not AI.
Incidentally, it is a site blessedly free of extra features that add nothing to the use case (sharing things you make).
libraryatnight
I still have no desire to use it, but reading the complaints and explanations of AI wrecking Pinterest has finally given me some understanding of what people do there and why they bother.
tracker1
I think even in this case, I might want to see CAD renderings, which I can't help but think might get swept closer to AI generated than "rendered".
nitwit005
Basically every art related social media hit that state unfortunately.
Aside from making search useless, it just demotivates everyone. No reason to use a social media site that appears full of bots.
tracker1
Searching for recipes is definitely an exercise in ai suck.
somat
Recipes are a sore spot for me. holy smokes is it a seo spam wasteland, I mean as far as our modern search engines go the whole web(statistically) is seo spam wasteland. but recipe sites are a specific particularly bad biome in that wasteland. they all follow the same infernal formula, about 5 paragraphs on how the recipe makes you feel, then the over specific formulation.
I know there are good recipe sites out there, you just will never find them, unless our search engine overlords slip and let one through.
The good web still exists, it is just that the search engines(our gateway to the web) are unable to find it under all the trash. My only solution so far has to been to start manually curating a list of good sites. A big part of the problem as I understand it is the search engines heavily prioritize new content over good content. To the point if I see a date in the current year next to the search result, I instantly reject it as seo garbage. If I were a better person I would sign up for Kagi, as I firmly believe a large part of the solution is to fix the business/customer dynamics, that is, you want to be the customer, not the product. But I am reluctant to sign up for another service so I am stuck shoveling slop to get through the web.
jddj
> No I don't want AI houses
Currently looking for an actual house on real estate aggregators, and feeling the same way
testfrequency
I’m annoyed for you.
The use case of someone preferring AI generated material vs the real material seems only to strike the algorithm and retention time of users so they always feel a sense of having what they need - despite it not existing.
SteveVeilStream
A risk is that it will give people a false sense of confidence that they are viewing real content. The only way out of this mess is cryptographic methodss (based on hardware in cameras) that can allow end-users to verify photos as real and then we assume every other photo may be AI.
Taek
Cryptographic components in cameras have roots of trust that can be compromised as well. Also, photos can be staged (many famous examples of this).
The only real solution is to build social infrastructure that helps people identify the trustworthiness of a source. Some efforts are being made in both the centralized and decentralized directions.
Spivak
Take a photo of an ai image, profit! Would the signature even survive the editing process of any photographer?
It would be an endless source of memes to try and make the most obviously fake image have the "verified real" badge.
WarOnPrivacy
Dear DDG, I genuinely, truly appreciate an AI filter on images.
But for the love of Bob, would you please enable absolute operands ("" or +) in image searching? It's been on your todo list for over a decade.
zahlman
I miss when you could put `+foo -bar` into a search engine, ctrl-F on the top ten results, and reliably find `foo` on all ten of them and `bar` on none of them.
Nowadays, putting in `-bar` might increase the number of results that are directly about bar.
roskelld
This bugs me no end. Image search is so challenging to use because the results are a vague interpretation of what you ask for, and don't try to be more descriptive because that's just more words to throw in the mix of results
tomchuk
Yesterday's discussion around Kagi[0] prompted me to poke through some settings there, as it had been a while. They've also added a "Exclude AI generated images" which they describe as "Best-effort removal of AI generated images from search results"
ajdude
Do they still hide tankman images in search results too?
animal_spirits
This is easy to check, and no they do not. I can see many photos on Bing of tank man.
karaterobot
There's a group of people for whom AI images seem to just be a trigger, and they simply never want to see them. So having a filter to remove those images makes sense. I don't really have that issue with AI images, but I often do want to have some way of filtering photographs from illustrations—be they drawings by humans, or images generated by AI. And that could go either way: maybe I want to see what an actual baby peacock looks like in nature sometimes, and maybe I want to see a cute illustration of a baby peacock other times. It would be great to have a filter for 'real' vs 'artificial'. Perhaps ironically, using AI is the best way to make that distinction on my behalf.
apothegm
If I’m looking for images because I’m curious what a thing really looks like, it’s counterproductive to see AI’s “artist’s conception” of it, which is often anywhere between not particularly accurate and a picture of something else entirely.
imagetic
I really want to support alternate search engines. And removing/filtering AI generated imagery is really important for research and history.
But DDG scrapes some bottom feeder news publications. Newsweek and MSNBC wire reposts shouldn't be the top results. Ever. Those are ghost articles and link bait.
explodes
Does Kagi skip these kinds of results?
lr0
While I like the effort, I can imagine the amount of false-positive images that this will flag, but still, better than nothing.
shadowgovt
As the technology nears perfection, whether something is "AI" will become a test like whether something is porn: "I know it when I see it."
duxup
I don't know how they're going to keep this up long term but I appreciate / like the effort / feature. Even google is getting infected where I search for just an animal name and a bunch of the results are meme like AI images of something that looks "like" that animal.
showcaseearth
Likewise, not sure how this will be sustainable. "Even google"... I'd instead say "Especially google". It's already a mess out there, and I hope Google and others take an active role in at least trying to make things usable.
duxup
I agree, although I don't know if Google cares. They're happy to provide tools to generate this stuff too ...
nitwit005
I see a lot of Google search results thar are websites dedicated to sharing AI art. It's not hard to keep a list of those going, and that will presumably remain a bit portion of it.
lenerdenator
DDG reminds me of what Google used to be. Hopefully they stay that way.
a_c
I have used ddg for many years. But I think the search results were too irrelevant to me most of the time now I have moved on
lr0
Google has personalized search enabled by default for users, which makes it feel more "relevant", of course you get this by sacrifacing any means of privacy. For me, I don't mint unpersonalized results, however, my reason for stopping using ddg is a bit unorthodox one; the overall search performance (as in the time you need to wait until the results load) was significantly higher than Google's. I still believe that Kagi is a game changer.
magicalhippo
For me it has been the reverse. I tried DDG many times over the years, but results were always lackluster, especially for local Norwegian results.
But a few years ago Google became so bad, I changed my browser default to DDG, and frankly I can count on two hands the number of times I've needed to go to alternatives since. Especially Norwegian content has gotten good enough in almost all cases.
That said, it's not perfect, there's still stuff it struggles with.
ASalazarMX
That was because Bing wasn't as good as Google, but now they're kinda even... because Google became much worse.
mock-possum
ddg pretty consistently fails to return expected a results, compared to google.
It’s a shame, I don’t want to stay with google, but it still does best fit my needs for search.
Ex: tumblr.com/ddgvsggl
More reasons to be thankful for uBlock!
“The filter relies on manually curated open-source blocklists, including the ‘nuclear’ list, provided by uBlockOrigin and uBlacklist Huge AI Blocklist,” DuckDuckGo said in a post on X.