DuckDuckGo Calls Out Google Search for 'Spying' on Users After Privacy Labels Go Live (macrumors.com) 31
An anonymous reader shares a report: Over the course of the last several weeks, Google has been adding App Privacy labels to its iOS apps in accordance with Apple's App Store rules, but it took Google multiple months to begin sharing the information. There was speculation that Google's delay meant that it had something to hide, which DuckDuckGo is leaning into with a blog that highlights Google's data collection and calls out the company for "spying" on users. [...] DuckDuckGo claims that Google "wanted to hide" the information that it collects, which is why Google took so long to roll out support for App Privacy labels. Most people are likely not surprised at the extent of the data that Google collects, but having it in one spot in the âOEApp StoreâOE is a stark reminder.
Why "Spying"? They are literally spying on users. (Score:5, Insightful)
Normally, I'd chalk this up to marketing/jealousy (Score:5, Interesting)
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Yes, DDG does this. But so does Google, Bing, Yahoo, and whoever else is out there. DDG relies upon other search engines behind it, so if their search goes through Google then you get Google results only with privacy added, and DDG does not re-prioritize Google's results.
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DDG does not rely on other search engines. You can, if you so choose, use a different search engine from their app or website using what they call !bangs, but then you’re directly taken to the website of the search enginge of your choice, where DDG has no say in which of your user data is collected and used.
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It's a deliberate misunderstanding of what Google said. They list a lot of data that they collect, but most of it is opt in.
At least that's how it is in GDPR countries.
Jonny Appleseed (Score:5, Interesting)
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When she finally did complain to me about it, instead of switching back I told her about the ability to add !g to a search to force it to resolve through google. She's mostly fine with it now since she can drop into google results whenever DDG fails to find what she's looki
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> whenever DDG fails to find what she's looking for
I love DDG but that is my biggest complaint. Just yesterday, I spent 15 minutes trying to get DDG to find something for me. On Google it was the first result. DDG fails hard on about 1/3 of my searches.
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I have never found that to happen, not even once. I have noticed though that Google trolls were all over the internet rubbishing DuckDuckGo results, with this kind of rubbish. For a while on Youtube if you wrote duckduckgo let alone the link the comment would be deleted 30 seconds later, which you would not notice unless you refreshed the screen, yeah that is how Youtube censor comments, behind you back, make it look like the Youtuber did it rather than youtube itself, really fucking dirty.
Every single time
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I've been using DDG daily for about 4 years. I only use Google when DDG fails me. Its nice that has not happened to you. Next time it happens I'll keep track of the example for you and post it here so you can experience it too.
DDG is a fine search engine, it hasn't caught up Google yet though. I wish it would.
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Re:Jonny Appleseed (Score:4, Insightful)
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I would be very annoyed if someone changed the settings of my phone without telling me. It’s a breach of my privacy.
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I've been there... And decided it is not worth it.
As they say, "The way to hell is paved with good intentions".
With which argument did I convince myself you ask? I would never trust my privacy/security to a third party, even a friend. Anyone promising me any of those two immediately gets an "untrusted" flag. I don't want to be flagged with that, as trust from my surroundings is the main social currency I know.
So I went back a few notches. I explain, I get blank looks, I get frustrated... Worth it.
But I do n
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Security groups will check the top 10 apps in a category and see if their label matches what the
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As for the pot shot at DDG specifically. Not sure what the complaint is here. Their browser does everything that any other browser does, except for the tracking.
It wasn't a dig; it was simply pointing out that their app is specifically designed to not store history or do anything that could possibly result in tracking, and as a result, it's easy to say what data it collects, because it is designed to actively thwart data collection.
Unfortunately, that model isn't realistic for most nontrivial apps, because most users depend pretty heavily on being able to quickly get back to what they were working on a few days later.
Re: Trolls will be trolls. (Score:2)
May want to give the app a try before assuming what it does/doesnâ(TM)t do
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DDG go does have support for cookies, history, etc. itâ(TM)s just easy to nuke all of that when you want to, and it doesnâ(TM)t track you itself. Either as the search engine or the web browser.
Okay, fair enough; it keeps a per-device history. Either way, history isn't shared between your computer and your phone, though, and it's is much harder for individuals to do that in an ad hoc fashion while protecting their own privacy than it is for a browser vendor to design the feature from the ground up with privacy in mind.
Privacy is the last thing... (Score:1)
Privacy is the last thing because companies make money collecting data on users, even for their own internal use to target ads. Privacy at Google, Facebook is like virginity in a maternity ward--a distant thing. JoshK. One reason I do use DuckDuckGo through a VPN.
DuckDuckGo feature request: "Just give me Google" (Score:2)
I like the idea of DDG and want to support them in principle, but the quality of their search results is often unusably poor, perhaps because Google has spied on me enough by now to learn roughly how I think to give me results closer to what I want. ;-)
It'd be great if DDG would add a button for "Ok, screw this, just send me to Google". It would save me the 5 seconds it takes to copy my query, type "google" in the address bar, paste my query and hit submit.
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It'd be great if DDG would add a button for "Ok, screw this, just send me to Google".
It's a bit more powerful than a button: https://duckduckgo.com/bang [duckduckgo.com]
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Oh great! Thanks! If I had mod points they'd be yours.
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I found a period of adjustment. You have to put more work into the search string than with Google. I got used to it and now use it for almost all searches, occasionally slipping into Bing if I come up empty. The only thing left is to switch to DDG for all image searches.
Is this suprising? (Score:2)
That is googles business model, to collect data to sell to other people. To say: "Aha! I caught google spying on people" is like saying "Aha, I caught walmart selling cheap goods to people"
Sic 'em! (Score:3)
Go Duck Go, and don't just nibble, take a bite outta 'em. :P