Google axes eco search engine

the world
Google is set to dominate it - but does it want to save it too?

Google has ended the briefest of relationships with a German-based company that runs the eco-friendly search engine Forestle.org.

The independent non-profit search engine donated money to saving patches of rainforest with every search, but Google complained that the site offered "incentives to click artificially on sponsored links". Forestle begs to differ and is hoping to be reactivated. The site was launched on 25 August.

Forestle counters Google's claim by saying that not only does it not offer incentives to click on sponsored links or ads, but it specifically warns against it. At the top of each page it posts the warning: "You harm Forestle, Google, and the advertising websites with artificial clicking."

Forestle delivered its results through Google and, bar administration costs, gave all of its money from sponsored links to The Nature Conservancy's Adopt an Acre Program. With 0.1 square yards of rainforest saved with each search, founder Christian Kroll said: 'Within our testing phase we already saved more than 15,000 square yards of rainforest."

Transparent accounting

At start up, admin costs made up only five per cent of its total income and Forestle promised to post its financial results on the site. From a users point of view, the search engine offered most of the advantages of Google except for the absence of links to other Google services such as Gmail, iGoogle, or Google Calendar. That said Maps and Image Search are linked up. Forestle had plug-ins that work with Firefox, Safari and Opera.

Forestle's home page announces: "In our opinion, Google ended the partnership, because Forestle became too successful." It's now asking users to support its reinstatement, and for the time being, to use Znout as a search engine. Znout is eco-friendly in that it reduces energy use on your computer by using less energy-draining black backgrounds, and eco servers. Znout has similar plug-in options to Forestle for using it as one of your browser's available search engines.

TechRadar will keep you up to date with any further developments in the dispute.

TOPICS
Latest in Search Engines
Perplexity search on a laptop.
How to replace Google Search with Perplexity AI
Google Learn About
Google Learn About is the patient teacher with a bag full of tricks we all wanted as kids
Bing
Microsoft is so desperate for people to drop Google for Bing it’s offering a $1 million reward
ChatGPT Search
I tried ChatGPT Search and now I might never Google again
Google AI Overviews
Google’s AI Overviews are now available to help a billion people avoid reading full articles
A person holding an iPhone close to the camera with the Google search homepage displayed onscreen
Judge rules Google has illegal search monopoly and you might not like what comes next
Latest in News
Google Gemini Flash 2.0 Images
I tried Gemini's new AI image generation tool - here are 5 ways to get the best art from Google's Flash 2.0
An image of the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra from a hands-on event
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra could resurrect an intriguing camera feature
Eurocom Raptor X18
At $15,000, this massive 256GB RAM laptop makes Apple's MacBook Pro look affordable, tiny and very, very slow
Cristin Milioti in Black Mirror season 7
Netflix launches trailer for Black Mirror season 7, giving us a look at its first-ever sequel episode and an unexpected returning character
A graphic of the PC Gaming Show
Get ready for a bounty of PC games on June 8, as the PC Gaming show is back
A close up of The Daily podcast from Pocket Casts' web page
‘Podcasting shouldn’t be locked behind walled gardens’: Pocket Casts slams Spotify and makes its web player free to all