I ditched Google for DuckDuckGo. Here’s why you should too

Via Wired

What was the last thing you searched for online? For me, it was ‘$120 in pounds’. Before that, I wanted to know the capital of Albania (Tirana), the Twitter handle of Liberal Democrat deputy leader Ed Davey (he’s @EdwardJDavey) and dates of bank holidays in the UK for 2019 (it’s a late Easter next year, folks). Thrilling, I’m sure you’ll agree. But something makes these searches, in internet terms, a bit unusual. Shock, horror, I didn’t use Google. I used DuckDuckGo. And, after two years in the wilderness, I’m pretty sure I’m sold on a post-Google future.

It all started with a realisation: most the things I search for are easy to find. Did I really need the all-seeing, all-knowing algorithms of Google to assist me? Probably not. So I made a simple change: I opened up Firefox on my Android phone and switched Google search for DuckDuckGo. As a result, I’ve had a fairly tedious but important revelation: I search for really obvious stuff. Google’s own data backs this up. Its annual round-up of the most searched-for terms is basically a list of names and events: World Cup, Avicii, Mac Miller, Stan Lee, Black Panther, Megan Markle. The list goes on. And I don’t need to buy into Google’s leviathan network of privacy-invading trackers to find out what Black Panther is and when I can go and see it at my local cinema.

While I continue to use Google at work (more out of necessity as my employer runs on G-Suite), on my phone I’m all about DuckDuckGo. I had, based on zero evidence, convinced myself that finding things on the internet was hard and, inevitably, involved a fair amount of tracking. After two years of not being tracked and targeted I have slowly come to realise that this is nonsense.

DuckDuckGo works in broadly the same way as any other search engine, Google included. It combines data from hundreds of sources including Wolfram Alpha, Wikipedia and Bing, with its own web crawler, to surface the most relevant results. Google does exactly the same, albeit on a somewhat larger scale. The key difference: DuckDuckGo does not store IP addresses or user information.

Billed as the search engine that doesn’t track you, DuckDuckGo processes around 1.5 billion searches every month. Google, for contrast, processes around 3.5 billion searches per day. It’s hardly a fair fight, but DuckDuckGo is growing. Back in 2012, it averaged just 45 million searches per month. While Google still operates in a different universe, the actual difference in the results you see when you search isn’t so far apart. In fact, in many respects, DuckDuckGo is better. Its search results aren’t littered with Google products and services – boxes and carousels to try and persuade people to spend more time in Google’s family of apps.

Search for, say, ‘Iron Man 2’ and Google will first tell you it can be purchased from Google Play or YouTube from £9.99. It will then suggest you play a trailer for the film on, where else, YouTube. The film is also “liked” by 92 per cent of Google users and people searching for this also search for, you guessed it, Iron Man and Iron Man 3. The same search on DuckDuckGo pulls in a snippet from Wikipedia and quick links to find out more on IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, Amazon or iTunes. For the most part, the top of Google’s page of results directs you towards more Google products and services.

Go further still and search for ‘Iron Man 2 cast’ and Google displays a carousel of names and pictures right at the top of the page. As a result, 50 per cent of all Google searches now end without a click. Great for Google, bad for the list of websites below that also contain this information and that you will never visit. Do the same search on DuckDuckGo and the top result is IMDb. It might sound small but issues like this are fundamental to how the internet works – and who makes the most money from it. Google’s prioritisation of its results, and a perceived bias towards its own products and services, has landed the company in hot water with the European Commission slapping it with multi-billion pound fines and launching investigation after investigation into alleged anti-competitive behaviour. What’s good for Google, the commission argues, isn’t necessarily good for consumers or competitors.

Then there’s privacy. Search for something on DuckDuckGo and, for the most part, you just get a list of links or a simple snippet with exactly the information you were looking for. And it does all this without storing or tracking my search history. Nor is what I search for collected and shared with advertisers, allowing them to micro-target me with a myriad of things I’m never likely to buy. The ads I do see in DuckDuckGo, which the company explains makes it more than enough money to operate, are more general. My search for bank holidays in the UK returned an advert for a package holiday company.

A quick office survey revealed similar search banality: recent Googles included ‘capitalist’, ‘toxoplasmosis’ and ‘hyde park police’. For the most part, what we’re looking for online is simple: it’s definitions, companies, names and places. Where DuckDuckGo has struggled is when I look for something incredibly specific. So, for example, search for ‘film Leonardo Dicaprio goats scene’ in DuckDuckGo and it doesn’t work out you’re looking for Blood Diamond. Google does. While Google, with its vastly greater tranche of search data, is able to second-guess what I’m after, DuckDuckGo requires a bit more hand-holding. That doesn’t mean I can’t find what I’m looking for, but it does mean I have to modify my search term a couple of times to narrow things down.any woman

But such moments are rare and fleeting. Yes, Google has more bells and whistles. But such bells and whistles are, once you stop seeing them, easily forgotten. A realisation that most of your online searches are really bloody obvious is somewhat liberating. You don’t need to be tracked and targeted to work out the name of that hideous earworm that’s been stuck in your head all day (in my case it was Vanessa Carlton’s A Thousand Miles, I don’t know why). DuckDuckGo helps you find it in the same way Google does: you tap in a random line of lyrics, it finds them on a site with song lyrics on it and voila, the earworm is dead.

It’s not a fair fight, but it is one, oddly, where the small guy can compete. It might seem ludicrous – DuckDuckGo has 78 employees and Google 114,096 – but often the outcome is the same. For the majority of your searches David, it turns out, is just as good as Goliath.

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24 Comments
Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
November 30, 2019 7:39 pm

I use it because so many of my searches or sites are blocked, come up empty or are choice number 60,000.

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
November 30, 2019 7:46 pm

I use it as well, if for no other reason than to be one less person directly supporting a CIA-Search Engine partnership.

Dirtperson Steve
Dirtperson Steve
November 30, 2019 7:46 pm

Use the browser & search engine on your phone. The browser has a button to clear all your history instantly.

I still use the chrome browser on my phone for this site to throw admin some $.

Bob P
Bob P
November 30, 2019 9:08 pm

I’ve used Duck for a long time and it does have the benefits stated above, but has also been infected with leftist lunacy. Try this search on duckduckgo:
“men can “

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Bob P
December 1, 2019 12:25 am

Try Quant. Possibly even more privacy?

thomas
thomas
November 30, 2019 9:59 pm

Just today, I searched for “govenorpalin.org” in google and it does not come up in first pages. I knew it existed and of course it was #1 in duck duck go. Switched right then.

gilberts
gilberts
November 30, 2019 10:06 pm

I use DuckDuckGo for so many reasons, primarily FUCK GOOGLE. Fuck Bing and Yahoo and all the Also Rans, too.

gilberts
gilberts
  gilberts
November 30, 2019 10:09 pm

While you’re at it, update your Duck with Privacy Badger, Stop All Ads, and Flash Blocker.

Uncola
Uncola
November 30, 2019 10:40 pm

The author wrote:

Where DuckDuckGo has struggled is when I look for something incredibly specific. So, for example, search for ‘film Leonardo Dicaprio goats scene’ in DuckDuckGo and it doesn’t work out you’re looking for Blood Diamond.

Then just simply broaden to other identifiers in the search like “Leonardo Dicaprio Africa movie” and “Blood Diamond” appears as the top post.

Sometimes when I’m looking for articles that have been memory-holed I’ll search key terms plus website names. This works quite well.

For example, search “malaysua flight MH17” and the top hits will bring links from Wikipedia, CBS, BBC and The Guardian (on Duck Duck Go). But query “malaysua flight MH17 Lew Rockwell” and one will very often find what just might be the rest of the story.

Uncola
Uncola
  Uncola
November 30, 2019 11:53 pm

As an addendum: In my suggested Duck Duck Go search of “malaysua flight MH17 Lew Rockwell” this article appears at the top:

The Downing of Malaysian Airlines MH1

The date of the article is 6-15-2019, or 41 days before Trump’s now (thanks to the “whistleblower) infamous call to Ukraine.

Written by a guy who is a “strategic risk consultant and lecturer” holding “a degree in politics from Princeton University and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics” – here is the last paragraph of the article:

Their shadowy acts in Ukraine may soon come to haunt key figures in Ukraine such as Kolomoisky, as well as people like Joe Biden and family. From the true authorship of the downing of MH17, which Dutch and other investigators believe was linked to Kolomoisky actors, to the Ukraine business dealings of Hunter Biden to the true facts of the Mueller “Russiagate” probe, all could well prove to be a far more revealing investigation for the US Justice Department than the obviously biased Mueller probe has been. Increasingly it is looking like the Ukraine and not Russia is the more likely source for interference in the 2016 US election, and not in the way we have been told by the establishment media such as CNN.

Even amidst any whitewashing by the U.S. Department of Justice, the internet is forever.

Long live the internet.

SteveO
SteveO
December 1, 2019 1:27 am
Apple
Apple
December 1, 2019 6:25 am

Been using duckduckgo fo awhile now

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
December 1, 2019 6:26 am

Google is Skynet.

Sarah Conner

deplorably stanley
deplorably stanley
December 1, 2019 6:31 am

Duck Duck Go is ok.

Gibiru – Uncensored Anonymous Search

is my favorite search engine which usually finds the material I’m looking for on the first page and never includes results from garbage websites like Pinterest, Amazon, or Quora.

Here are some other good search engines you can use which are not based on google:

Yandex.com
Searx
Bing
Qwant
Swisscows.com

RiNS
RiNS
December 1, 2019 8:30 am

One needs to go one step further.

Use the Brave browser too.

https://brave.com/download/

It has a built in VPN.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  RiNS
December 1, 2019 8:41 am

Same for the Epic Privacy browser, which I use:

https://www.epicbrowser.com/

RiNS
RiNS
  ILuvCO2
December 1, 2019 8:55 am

Nice catch Carbon…. I will check it out.

Thanks!

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  ILuvCO2
December 1, 2019 10:15 am

I would again strongly recommend ProtonMail to anyone interested in a mail service promoting privacy, but which also offers a great UX. Startmail’s UX sucked. I gave them a couple of years to fix it but they didn’t seem to know how to improve performance.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  ILuvCO2
December 1, 2019 11:00 am

CO2.
Just switched to epic. Instantly have clear screen. Was being inundated with moving pop ups while on TBP. Thanks.

Tony
Tony
  ILuvCO2
December 1, 2019 11:42 am

I’ve been using Brave for about six moths and do like it. Have used DuckDuck for several years. Has anyone compared Brave to Epic?

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  RiNS
December 1, 2019 10:19 am

I’d lean toward a browser which very few use (Opera), and bolt on privacy and ad blocking extensions. It has a solid update history behind it and it’s been around for a while. Then you can just use the VPN of your choice as a background task.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 2, 2019 3:01 am

Definitely the best search engine for privacy, I also have been using it for months and would not move back to Google. I have also ditched all my Google services, email, Google Docs, calender, etc etc because when I looked, Google had over 10 years of history for me!

The main advantage to DuckDuckGo for me, is that no matter who you are, you get the same results for the search term, whereas Google give each person different search results based on the psychosomatic they have on you (which for most of us is unbelievably extensive). You are Googles product, and they sell you to pretty much anyone who will pay. A far cry from where Google started out.

Marc
Marc
December 17, 2019 1:06 pm

Swisscows.ch is a safer alternative imo

Like Switzerland. Neutral. Safe. Happy : )

A 2 yr. platform resident
A 2 yr. platform resident
  Marc
December 17, 2019 1:30 pm

Good tip. Thx.
Do you have a privacy safe email recommendation for personal use so I can bail out on Gmail’s prying eyes?

Paid subscription email VPN suggestion is fine.

I had heard of Tunnel Bear.

Any others that happy users that want to suggest are welcome to do so.
Thanks in advance.