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Pro-Privacy Search Engine DuckDuckGo Hits 30 Million Daily Searches, Up 50% In a Year (techcrunch.com) 141

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Some nice momentum for privacy-focused search engine DuckDuckGo which has just announced it's hit 30 million daily searches a year after reaching 20 million -- a year-on-year increase of 50%. Hitting the first 10 million daily searches took the search engine a full seven years, and then it was another two to get to 20 million. So as growth curves go it must have required patience and a little faith in the run up. It also recently emerged that DDG had quietly picked up $10 million in VC funding, which is only its second tranche of external investment. The company told us this financing would be used to respond to an expanding opportunity for pro-privacy business models, including by tuning its search engine for more local markets and expanding its marketing channels to "have more of a global focus."
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Pro-Privacy Search Engine DuckDuckGo Hits 30 Million Daily Searches, Up 50% In a Year

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    On the network I manage, all requests for google.com resolve to duckduckgo.com.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 12, 2018 @09:14AM (#57466626)
      I'm sure both of your cats are very disappointed about this.
    • What happens when they hit !g at the end of a searxh query? Infinite loop?
  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @09:08AM (#57466596)
    I would have been up for that.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Google's poor results (some due to censorship) are as likely a cause for people seeking other search engines as privacy. I don't seen any indication that DuckDuckGo is above censorship either. We need a flagship open search engine, like a Firefox or a Linux, but for search. Although it does seem like the censors are invading those projects as well.

    • I agree,and I wish DDG would publish its source code.I'd like to see what forks come out of it.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Lately I've found Google results to be stunningly poor. It seems that in addition to indexing a page's straight content (the body text of an article) it also indexes anything that may be on the sidebar like a news feed. You end up with top results that don't even contain the word you are searching for.

      • Re:Censorship (Score:5, Interesting)

        by ReneR ( 1057034 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @09:37AM (#57466720)
        it also feels to me that Google became worse, often when I look for open source stuff, build errors, errors, patches (for #t2sde https://t2sde.org/ [t2sde.org] I do not find much anymore, a decade ago I usually found hits on mailing lists, bug trackers, etc. Maybe Google focused more on gossip and social drama, then actual hard facts :-/
        • Re:Censorship (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Mashiki ( 184564 ) <mashiki&gmail,com> on Friday October 12, 2018 @10:35AM (#57466976) Homepage

          To put it simply? Google became normized, dropped functions and search options that made it popular and then started 'curating results' that it believes you should see instead of of what you're searching for. You made a point about how bad it's gotten for OS/FOSS type stuff, but it's almost impossible to find information with google for generic troubleshooting of windows codes these days. The bit about google being focused on gossip and social drama? Well probably more truth to that then we think, google wanted to be the "search page" of the internet, the first thing everyone went to for everything from email to news. They got there, and...it all went to shit.

          There's an upside with this though, it's fostering competitive behavior and people are looking for other options. Now the question will be, will google try to go full walled garden when people move to other sites or try to bring people back.

          • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )
            In short, I don't think Google can put up a walled garden, no matter what they try. They're a browser based service, and as such will always be subject to the disconnected nature of browsers.
            • Re:Censorship (Score:4, Interesting)

              by Mashiki ( 184564 ) <mashiki&gmail,com> on Friday October 12, 2018 @12:29PM (#57467626) Homepage

              In short, I don't think Google can put up a walled garden, no matter what they try. They're a browser based service, and as such will always be subject to the disconnected nature of browsers.

              Newspapers also didn't believe that if they went walled garden it wouldn't backfire in a spectacular fashion either, but it did. The thing is, google might try to do it if it looks like there are massive drop-offs in continuous users, but enough of a user base to remain profitable. In the worst case scenario? They try to leverage their ad service so it only works with one or two browsers, in turn sites starved for money try to force users to use a particular browser. The usual useragent tricks no longer work as the browser requires authing off a unique hash.

              There's plenty of ways they could do it, of course they'd also set themselves up for some ripe trustbusting.

              • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

                by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )

                Newspapers also didn't believe that if they went walled garden it wouldn't backfire in a spectacular fashion either, but it did. The thing is, google might try to do it if it looks like there are massive drop-offs in continuous users, but enough of a user base to remain profitable. In the worst case scenario? They try to leverage their ad service so it only works with one or two browsers, in turn sites starved for money try to force users to use a particular browser. The usual useragent tricks no longer work as the browser requires authing off a unique hash.

                There's plenty of ways they could do it, of course they'd also set themselves up for some ripe trustbusting.

                First on Google - while I admit there are technical methods to make it happen, they can't because any of those proposals would cut their audience in major ways. And they don't have the pull for the most desirable US target audience - iPhone users. So if you can't get iPhone users, you've already failed. Google needs their iPhone target audience more than Apple needs Google.

                Newspapers screwed up a long long long time ago. They made some serious miscalculations, in ways that were painful to watch even as th

        • Agree, Google used to be a good place to find information about something, now it's a good place to find companies selling the very "something".
      • I have the same experince,and I believe that this is due to the bubble effect which DDG speaks of
      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        OTOH, when searching for info when working on my truck, Google usually returns better results. There are certain forums with knowledgeable people who have walked people through similar issues that Google will return close to the top, which DDG hasn't seemed to have indexed, or at least doesn't list.

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          Please take 1 minute and give them feedback [duck.co]! Just copypaste your post, and add a link to the forums they suck at finding. You may make the world a better place.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            Good idea. Too bad that the feedback option seems to be hidden by default, or at least starting out by right clicking feedback and choosing search and then clicking various things in the new browser window, didn't allow me to find it. Something else to give feedback on.

      • Re:Censorship (Score:5, Informative)

        by jwhyche ( 6192 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @01:01PM (#57467800) Homepage

        You found them stunningly poor? I have found them for the most part to be completely useless. 90% of the shit that gets sent back is nothing but ads. I'm doing a search for kernel RAID tweaking and I get a page full of shit where I can hire someone to do it for me, or shit that has nothing to do with the shit I'm looking for.

        I found what I was looking for using duckduckgo. Damn, Linux has a nice RAID level.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Lately I've found Google results to be stunningly poor. It seems that in addition to indexing a page's straight content (the body text of an article) it also indexes anything that may be on the sidebar like a news feed. You end up with top results that don't even contain the word you are searching for.

        I did notice that too. Google becomes less and less useful.

  • People avoiding evil (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    People don't trust the creepy haters at Google.

  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @09:20AM (#57466650)

    Some nice momentum for privacy-focused search engine DuckDuckGo which has just announced it's hit 30 million daily searches a year after reaching 20 million -- a year-on-year increase of 50%.

    To provide perspective Google does 1.2 trillion searches per day. Good progress but pretty much a rounding error compared to the big boys.

    The company told us this financing would be used to respond to an expanding opportunity for pro-privacy business models, including by tuning its search engine for more local markets and expanding its marketing channels to "have more of a global focus."

    Having trouble parsing this sentence. It's so vague as to be effectively meaningless.

    I've seen what DuckDuckGo's business model [fourweekmba.com] is supposed to be and I'm rather dubious how much it can scale because advertisers and retailers don't generally give a shit about your privacy and in fact your privacy is somewhat at odds with their incentives. Furthermore Google and Bing and the others get all the network effects so advertisers and retailers aren't generally going to flock to a small search engine that isn't going to give them as much data or reach as many potential customers. If DuckDuckGo is really doing what they say they are trying to do I wish them well but it's not going to be an easy battle.

    • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @09:33AM (#57466700)

      Some nice momentum for privacy-focused search engine DuckDuckGo which has just announced it's hit 30 million daily searches a year after reaching 20 million -- a year-on-year increase of 50%.

      To provide perspective Google does 1.2 trillion searches per day. Good progress but pretty much a rounding error compared to the big boys.

      This is a good thing.

      T

      I've seen what DuckDuckGo's business model [fourweekmba.com] is supposed to be and I'm rather dubious how much it can scale because advertisers and retailers don't generally give a shit about your privacy and in fact your privacy is somewhat at odds with their incentives. Furthermore Google and Bing and the others get all the network effects so advertisers and retailers aren't generally going to flock to a small search engine that isn't going to give them as much data or reach as many potential customers. If DuckDuckGo is really doing what they say they are trying to do I wish them well but it's not going to be an easy battle.

      I dunno about you, but I much prefer to use less "popular" things in life. I prefer the National Hockey League to the NFL, and DDG to Google, both on it's privacy model, as well as knowing that huge amounts of money drive corruption. That is probably heresy in a world where Kim Kardashian is considered the best because of her gazillion Twitter followers.

      And if DDG gets too big and falls to evil, I'll dump them in a New York City minute.

      • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @10:09AM (#57466852)

        This is a good thing.

        It is neither a good thing nor a bad thing. What it does tell us is that it is not a popular thing. Increasing a tiny number by 50% is not actually very impressive compared to growing a big number by a smaller percentage. For Apple computer to grow by just 10% next year they will have to generate more business than the entire revenue of eBay over the same period. That is FAR more impressive than DDG growing 50% from close to zero.

        I dunno about you, but I much prefer to use less "popular" things in life.

        I don't give a shit if something is popular or not. I care if it does what I want/need and provides good value. The only reason I consider something's popularity is to evaluate whether that popularity or lack thereof will cause me problems. For example if a product is unpopular chances are that service and support for it are going to be hard to find in the future. Similarly I sometimes avoid something popular because of excessive crowds or because the popularity of it will cause my needs to be dismissed as unimportant.

        I prefer the National Hockey League to the NFL, and DDG to Google, both on it's privacy model, as well as knowing that huge amounts of money drive corruption.

        If you prefer the NHL to the NFL because hockey is your particular brand of vodka then that's fine, although calling the NHL unpopular is objectively kind of ridiculous. If you prefer it solely because it is less popular it means you are a hipster. You be you and use what works for you but I am not impressed by anyone who chooses something just because it is popular or explicitly because it is not.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I think more people are getting fed up of Google as a whole, myself included. While I still have gmail and an android phone, I don't use gboard as the default keyboard, I dumped Chrome v69 for Firefox, no longer use Google News since they destroyed the UI and use DuckDuckGo as my primary search engine. I still use Google search for the odd few things, but only a few things DDG struggles with. I now find myself consciously trying to find alternatives to Google's products.

    • by OneHundredAndTen ( 1523865 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @10:16AM (#57466894)
      I'll have to try DuckDuckGo again. I used for a few weeks earlier this year, and I had to revert to Google - the quality of DuckDuckGo lagged, at the time, well behind that of Google's. I dislike Google more and more - in fact, they look like the MIcrosoft of old more and more with every passing day - but until an independent search engine reaches parity with Google's, I'll have to stick with it.
      • by cyberchondriac ( 456626 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @10:28AM (#57466942) Journal

        Same here.. for the past two weeks, I tried DuckDuckGo on my work linux box. When looking for technical documents or more detailed info, DDG just didn't cut it, regrettably. I'm back to using google again, for now.
        For personal use though, I think DDG might just work out fine.

        • DDG is hit and miss for technical stuff for me - I'd say about 20% of the time it provides better results than Google and 20% of the time on par. Ultimately though I'll usually end up having to search on Google but even then I've noticed Google's stuff is driving me more and more to corporate white pages and market copy rather than actual technical stuff or independent blogs.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          I've just about given Google up completely for about a year and a half now. I only use Google in very rare instances which are mostly long shots anyways and I simply need to try a 2nd engine, not necessarily Google. In my experience, DDG is waaay better than Google for technical stuff. Especially coding references. One of the really nice things is how they put the main answer to stackoverflow questions right in the top of the search page.

  • Google's new "be evil" mantra pissed me off enough, I use it as default, too, only revert to google if I can not find someitng, e.g. obscure open source bits & such.
  • Yes, yes, yes (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 12, 2018 @09:42AM (#57466746)

    As a former Google engineer, I am so happy to hear this. I am currently phasing Google out of every part of my life. The last thing I have, that I don't know if I can ever really get rid of, is my Gmail. That said, most of my personal emails have cut over to another already, and I do everything I can to keep my access to it isolated to avoid giving Google any freebies when it comes to tracking. I am not anti-ad (though I am anti invasive/malicious ad), as ads thanklessly power the free internet that everyone expects that they should be handed for free, but the threat Google and the other massive multinationals pose in terms of censorship, spying, and information control is unforgivable. They should all be regulated as publishers and utilities.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 )

      Got fired did yea. I just got that vibe, due to lack of any detail, on what the issues are. And you just want to hurt Google, who probably had hurt you.
      I am not saying Google is a saint. But if you are going to preface your opinion with "As a former Google engineer" it is implying that you have some insider knowledge on sometime on some interesting tidbits. Then when you elaborate with reasons such as "censorship, spying, and information control is unforgivable" this isn't anything new to us.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        No, I quit and am contacted by their alumni recruiters quarterly. Nice try, though. And yes, I do have knowledge of how extensively their political views penetrate their business practices, both because I worked there, and from what's readily available in the news.

  • This is a perfect example of the influence of the tech community. Many on Slashdot take a dim view of our ability to impact the wider discussion but we do. It is the small army of people like us who drive things like this. No one would be using DuckDuck without the influence of the privacy aware tech community. Same thing happens with browser choice. I attribute this to word of mouth. Track that shit Facebook.
    • I agree. I see many tech enthusiasts use DDG,not only for tuhe privacy factor but also because DDG is better for tech questions
    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @10:20AM (#57466906)

      I don't think the Tech community has a Dim view of our ability to impact the world on a large scale. But our ability to affect on a small scale that affects our lives seems to be the harder push.
      Trying to get work to make business decision on products not from the sales of the product, but from a good understanding of the underlining infrastructure behind it.
      Trying to get your friends and family to be more secure with their systems, so they are not breaking down all the time and asking you to fix it.
      Having people realize as a tech professional your Job isn't "Fixing Computers" (My apologies to those who are actually in systems repair you are a professional too)
      Having people with with basic understanding trying to tell us how to do things, and get pissed off because what we do is too complex for them.

      Sure if there is a big problem with Microsoft, Google, Facebook. The tech community on the whole has a power to put them in their place. But most of our chips on our shoulder is from the small things that happen daily.

  • Just like they will with any alternative to Big Tech.

    Did you notice a lot of people in the media are the same tribe as the guys who run Google and Facebook? Weird!

  • Unless Duck-Duck-Go releases who has been using the service.

  • Just curious for those who have been using DuckDuckGo - how's the quality of the search results?

    • by TadMSTR ( 996071 )

      I usually find what I need on DuckDuckGo fairly easily. I have it as my default on several browsers, computers and my phone. I suggest just force yourself to use it for a week and see how things go. Can't hurt.

    • by Rufty ( 37223 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @10:14AM (#57466874) Homepage

      Good enough. Generally I use DDG by default, and if that doesn't find it (last time, a few days ago, was errors for a discontinued bluetooth module) and then if google also fails I read the manual.

    • Far better for tech stuff and a lot of things,as DDG shows a short summary or the relevant command(from askubuntu/Stack) at the top of the page. Saves me many clicks.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      I actually prefer it to Google as it doesn't try to guess what I'm searching for and insert junk results based on previous queries (yes I was looking for jquery this morning now I'm looking for something else now.)

      It's "good enough" as others have said

    • Just curious for those who have been using DuckDuckGo - how's the quality of the search results?

      Overall quite goo.

      I find that I usually only need to revert to Google for 1. really obscure technical searches (most are fine on DDG), and 2. super new stuff

    • Just curious for those who have been using DuckDuckGo - how's the quality of the search results?

      Works well for me.

      When I’m searching, most often I’m looking to resolve some coding issue or another. DDG seems to do a pretty good job returning helpful results for that. On the occasions it doesn’t, I haven’t found Google to provide anything substantively better.

  • by EnOne ( 786812 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @10:03AM (#57466822)
    If you use a VPN and not the Chrome browser Google search will sometimes do a captcha check where you have to click on all the images of cars or storefronts or crosswalks. Because of this it makes DuckDuckGo the default choice for those users.

    You can verify yourself by using Opera on a VPN after you clear Opera's cache and cookies
  • It is true Tesla Model 3 sales, year over year, have gone up by 18000% in Q3 of 2018.

    That is because last year this quarter they sold some 300 cars, and this quarter they sold 53000. Percentage growth year over year could be very misleading when you start from very small base.

  • by Jzanu ( 668651 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @12:08PM (#57467516)
    That claim about a search engine that filters everything through Yandex, the openly Russian intelligence service scoop, is idiotic.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    and as such it is subject to U.S. law and U.S. court orders, the type that f.ex. say "hand over all search terms originating from this IP starting today".

    If you want a a search engine that is private and secure, for real, then you use the European alternatives, biggest and most popular being startpage.com, preferably configured to strictly use EU servers.

    • by Shaix ( 4995515 )
      Except that duckduckgo doesn't collect your IP, nor your search terms, so there is nothing to hand over.
  • Up 50% In a Year

    For that AMAZING statistic, you pretty much HAVE TO capitalize "Up".

    One exclamation mark for the price of none. Who would ever turn that offer down?!!

    But then, what do you do with "in"?

    Lower cased, after the gleeful orgasm, it has a conspicuously deflationary appearance.

    So UP it goes TOO.

  • If the corporate narrative were true you'd expect there to be no increase in privacy-focused search engine proxies, after all people just don't care (or so we're told). It's interesting how this contradicts the (almost entirely) corporate tech press narrative often repeated here: that people don't value their privacy. We're told some variation of that establishment-defending excuse on corporate repeater sites like this one whenever someone finds it necessary to stress a privacy-preserving alternative not fo

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