In that case, get uBlock. The answer is in the first result, on the first screen, and the answer is even quoted in the short description from the site. (As a bonus, it also blocks the cookie consent popups on the AA site, if you like.)
The only thing getting in the way of the real, vetted, straight-from-the-source answer currently is the AI overview.
Even so, saying that the UX of the web is almost as good as the UX of an LLM after you take steps to work around the UX problems with the web isn’t really an argument.
There’s really no point talking about how the web could have almost as good UX as LLMs if users did things that they do not do. Users are still getting shitty UX from the web.
> The LLM UX is going to rapidly converge with the search UX as soon as these companies run out of investor funds to burn.
The point of the article is that these companies can be profitable as-is. If chatbots screw up their UX, it’s not because they need it to survive.
And again, I’m judging based on what is actually the case today, not a speculative future.
I’m pointing out that LLMs have much better UX than the web. Repeatedly saying “but what if they didn’t?” to me is uninteresting.
When all you get back is a wall of LLM generated text blocking ads will be impossible. This will go the same way as google search results. Probably within six months.
The web has this shitty UX. LLMs do not have this shitty UX. I’m going to judge on what I can see and use.