• auth@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    How can a privacy-focused search engine block Tor? You probably should remove those.

  • kixik@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    searx and searxng are not search engines, and searx is more private (searxng collects info from users, which searx never wanted to). AFAIK duckduckgo is neither a search engine on its own, it uses blink…

          • Pumpkin@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Just looked it up since I was sure I had read they had their own. On their wikipedia article it says:

            In its early days on the Internet, the Qwant search engine relied on Bing to provide more relevant results. In 2016, Qwant claimed to be increasingly using its own results from its own exploration robots. It is still at the status of hybrid engine.[89] In 2020, Qwant claimed to have exceeded 50% of independent results for web searches, and 70% for all researchs

            so I guess it’s both bing and their own thing.

            • nof4n@lemmy.mlOP
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              1 year ago

              So, ddg and brave also have own indices. But i dont think, that it is matter, anyway they send data to 3rd party services.

  • citytree@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Why is Ecosia on the list?

    Quoting from tosdr.org:

    • This service can view your browser history
    • This service may collect, use, and share location data
    • This service allows tracking via third-party cookies for purposes including targeted advertising
    • This service tracks which web page referred you to it
    • Your personal data is given to third parties

    Doesn’t look privacy-respecting.