
Yahoo is officially back in the search conversation, with Yahoo Scout, a new AI-powered answer engine that wants to take on Google’s AI mode and Perplexity by doing something surprisingly old-school. Instead of hiding links behind buttons or footnotes, Scout puts them front and center and makes clicking links part of the experience.
Yahoo Scout enters the AI search race with a different playbook
Scout is being pitched as an “answer engine,” not an AI chatbot. Ask it a question, and you get a clear, conversational response, but one that is loaded with visible blue links. Up to nine sources can appear for a single query, along with a full list of where the information came from.
Yahoo says this is deliberate. While rivals focus on smooth summaries, Scout is designed to keep the web visible rather than replacing it, a move that directly addresses publisher concerns around Google’s AI search quietly siphoning traffic.
Yahoo Scout is rolling out in beta starting today for U.S. users, available on scout.yahoo.com as well as inside the Yahoo Search app on iOS and Android.
Yahoo Scout is betting links still matter in AI search
Under the hood, Scout runs on Anthropic’s Claude model, combined with Yahoo’s own data, tone, and massive content library. That includes Yahoo News, Finance, Sports, and other verticals, along with web results powered by Microsoft Bing.
The result feels familiar if you have used Perplexity or Google’s AI mode, but the presentation is very different. Links are treated as the point, not an afterthought, and the interface feels more like a curated guide than a chatty assistant.
There is also a business reason for this approach. Yahoo does not have a giant search ads empire to protect, which gives it more freedom than Google to lean into AI answers without worrying about cannibalizing its core revenue.
CEO Jim Lanzone told The Verge that Scout is on track to eventually replace traditional Yahoo Search, and the company is already monetizing it through affiliate links and ads placed at the bottom of results.
Compared to Perplexity and Google’s AI mode, Scout is less about being your AI companion and more about being a fast, utilitarian way to find reliable information. It is not trying to be clever or personal. Yahoo is betting that in a world full of AI summaries and synthetic answers, simply pointing people clearly to the source might be the most radical move of all.
