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Best private browser! Be Brave! | Techkings

Best private browser! Be Brave!

StrawDog

TK Veteran
Click it if your brave enough!

So yeah, awesome browser! never mind this "duckduckgo" shi* that just keeps your browsing history like foogle etc. well good at blocking ads etc.

hope it helps!

HERE


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IMHO it's well worth spending a bit of time with Brave and the eco-system around it too. The people there look to be doing a great job of showing us how it can be done.

That said, @StrawDog, any chance you could expand on your comment about duckduckgo please (personally speaking, I've never experienced that when using DDG)
 
Well at first i noticed that all my search results were being stored, and then I wanted a search engine that encrypted my search request before sending it to their servers and coming back with results, how ever, DDG does not fall into that catorgory.

Now for what ever reason, on research, I've been led to a "dangerous site" could this be DDG's attempt to hide the truth? well **** it, i took the pluge (PC riddle with viruses...lol) and there fore I've copied and pasted it for you.

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DuckDuckGo is an excellent search engine if you want to minimize ads targeted at you based on your search terms. However, calling DuckDuckGo a true “private search engine” is a stretch. The problem with DuckDuckGo is that it leaves openings for your search terms to leak, even if you believe that DDG is keeping them private.

DuckDuckGo’s Illusion of Privacy
DuckDuckGo doesn’t track you. That’s one of the company’s primary value propositions.

In a Quora post from Gabriel Weinberg, DuckDuckGo’s CEO and Founder, he says that DuckDuckGo “empowers you to seamlessly take control of your personal information online, without any tradeoffs.” Unfortunately, it appears DuckDuckGo often puts convenience over privacy, which ultimately is the same trap that Google’s search engine falls into.

Bangs Aren’t Private
DuckDuckGo’s Bangs, which allows you to search other websites from DuckDuckGo are an issue. Many people assume that since they are using DuckDuckGo, they’re able to search whichever website they want without suffering the privacy consequences. This isn’t true.

Bangs may let you search from DuckDuckGo, but if you use the Google Bang, you are basically just searching Google. In this case, DuckDuckGo offers zero privacy protection.

DuckDuckGo’s Browser History Problem

In a blog post on DuckDuckGo’s blog, the company claims, “each time you search on DuckDuckGo, you have a blank search history, as if you’ve never been there before.” This claim is misleading because of what we consider to be DuckDuckGo’s biggest privacy flaw. When you search with DuckDuckGo, your search terms appear both in your search URL and in your browser history.

While DuckDuckGo wants you to be able to search without being tracked, it’s irresponsible for the company to call itself a private search engine. DuckDuckGo doesn’t track you like Google does, but it needs to do a better job of disclosing how it actually protects its users’ search privacy.

DuckDuckGo Has a Responsibility To Inform Its Users
DuckDuckGo is privacy-friendly BUT…since your search terms show up in your URL and in your browsing history, anyone monitoring your network traffic or on your computer can easily see what you searched for. Whenever we express concern about this, we’re often met with claims that this is for convenience sake and is easily turned off in DuckDuckGo’s settings.

It’s irresponsible to assume that people know that their search terms aren’t actually private. Users without advanced technical know-how may not know how to change their settings in DuckDuckGo to have the highest possible privacy settings. If these users don’t understand that their search terms still show up in their browsing history, it could lead to some awkward situations.
 
Many thanks for such an extensive reply.
Whilst there is nothing there that I would fundamentally wish to disagree with in principle, I do however think that it is important to understand and distinguish between how a browser and any browser extensions/add-ons behave, as well as how web-sites/web-services behave too. For example, if a browser is set to spill it's guts to anyone who asks for say available browsing history for example then one can hardly complain that it's a search-engine's fault. Rather it is incumbent upon each of us to look beyond the default settings and try our best to mitigate things as best we can and too our choice and liking. That said, browser profiling is a very real thing and there's not really very much you can do about it.
 
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