Topic: DuckDuckGo
DuckDuckGo positions itself as a privacy-focused alternative to mainstream search engines, emphasizing user data protection and minimal tracking. However, its recent decisions, such as down-ranking sites related to Russian disinformation and its partnerships with Microsoft, raise concerns about potential censorship and the integrity of its privacy claims. The platform’s evolution highlights the ongoing tension between user privacy and external pressures from larger tech entities.
-
DuckDuckGo Installs Surge 30.5% After Google AI Search Overhaul
The numbers are small but for the first time the friction of switching looks cheaper to users than the cost…
-
DuckDuckGo Browser Beta Arrives on Windows
A new private alternative.
-
DuckDuckGo introduces AI feature that uses Wikipedia as a source
Despite Wikipedia’s questionable accuracy.
-
DuckDuckGo opens Mac browser beta to all
Now available.
-
Developers fear new Google Play policy could restrict VPNs that block invasive ads
New broadly-phrased policy.
-
DuckDuckGo’s email privacy forwarding feature is now open to all
The service removes trackers from emails and protects users’ real email addresses.
-
DuckDuckGo will now block more Microsoft ad tracking scripts after backlash
Improving privacy.
-
Brave Search announces record growth, new features
Leaving beta.
-
Brave Search challenges DuckDuckGo on trackers controversy
Rivals battle it out.












