While DuckDuckGo is completely anonymous, Google is of course not. In fact, quite the opposite. On Google, your searches are tracked, mined, and packaged up into a data profile for advertisers to follow you around the Internet through those intrusive, annoying, and ever-present banner ads, via Google’s massive ad networks, embedded across. The extension further lets you switch your default search engine to DuckDuckGo, which doesn't track user data. It's optional, and also available without the app. However, if you're into data privacy and tracking, ditching Google for alternatives like DuckDuckGo, Startpage or Searx is a start. While DuckDuckGo is completely anonymous, Google is of course not. In fact, quite the opposite. On Google, your searches are tracked, mined, and packaged up into a data profile for advertisers to follow you around the Internet through those intrusive, annoying, and ever-present banner ads, via Google’s massive ad networks, embedded across.
Gabriel Weinberg is the founder of DuckDuckGo, a search engine that relieves the pain points we find in the major search engine players… we’re talkin’ ‘bout you Google and Bing!
Seriously cool features include:
- NO Tracking- DuckDuckGo does not collect or share your personal info. Excellent.
- NO Bubbling- DuckDuckGo does not customize search results based on your Web history. Rad.
- !Bang Syntax– This feature allows you to search hundreds of engines or query types at the same time. Perfect.
I caught up with Gabriel for the first edition of The Startup Sit Down, to get the scoop on the life and times of DuckDuckGo, the inspiration behind the startup’s hatching, and how pool parties keep up team morale.
What’s DuckDuckGo all about and what makes it stand out from the competition?
Gabriel Weinberg: DuckDuckGo is a general search engine. We focus on having way more instant answers, way less spam/clutter and real privacy.
Tell us a little about where you’re coming from.
GW: I grew up in Atlanta, GA and went to MIT. After college, I went right into Internet startups. After several failed projects, I ran a successful company that was sold in 2006. That was all in Boston. Then I moved to Philadelphia where I live now and where I started DuckDuckGo.
How was DuckDuckGo hatched, and what really sparked the inspiration?
GW: I was pursuing a number of projects around structured content, really out of personal interest. I had noticed that Google seemed to increasingly have a lot of SEO spam. I also noticed it didn’t seem to be using crowd-sourced sites like Wikipedia particularly well. So I really started out trying to launch anything that addressed those two issues.
Biggest startup surprise (good or bad) so far?
GW: I made the decision to stop storing IP addresses and by extension not track users when it was much less of a mainstream issue. I believe that when people know about the issue, like we’ve tried to educate on Don’t Track Us and Don’t Bubble Us, a large % of people agree with our point of view. However, I was surprised and am grateful that there has been an increasing amount of media attention on this subject.
One thing you would have done differently?
GW: I really don’t have any major regrets right now. You can make the argument that I should have taken DuckDuckGo more seriously earlier, and dropped everything else I was working on. It took a bit of time for it to be my 24/7 thing.
What is DuckDuckGo’s success sweet spot?
GW: I’m hoping it will be DuckDuckHack. This is our new (but a long time in the making) open source platform for developers to make instant answers plugins for the search engine. I’d love to see instant answers for the vast majority of queries.
Do you have any interesting team morale-building/stress-busting techniques?
GW: Still learning on this one :). I think that when people have ownership of their projects and wide flexibility to attack them as they see fit, they produce the best stuff. Also, we just had a pool party!
Favorite tech tool?
Duckduckgo Search
GW: Multiple monitors. I’m constantly messing with the configuration, but I think a lot of screen real estate is key to my productivity. It isn’t for everyone, but I like to have a lot of server windows open.
What’s your “man, I wish I would have thought of that” startup and why?
Bitchute
GW: I’m more struck by things that I stopped pursuing that ended up being successful in other startups. For example, I had worked on something that worked like Tumblr/posterous many years ago, but just didn’t stick with it.
Parting words of wisdom for startup newbies and wannabies?
GW: I have a lot of long-winded advice on my blog: http://ye.gg/blog. The short version is http://ye.gg/advice. The shorter version is don’t overthink it–get out there and do. The shortest version is no excuses.
Thanks Gabriel for being The Startup Sit Down’s guinea pig. We’ll be sure to check out DuckDuckGo and give it a proper search shot.
Duckduckgo Vs Google
Good Luck!
Photo Credits
We often receive requests to develop a Web browser and, although we've got our hands tied with search, there are various ways to add DuckDuckGo to many existing browsers, either manually or by installing our browser extension.
To start, please select your browser from the list below:
Duckduckgo Browser
- Chrome (extension direct link)
- Firefox (extension direct link)
- Microsoft Edge (extension direct link)
- Opera (extension direct link)
- Safari (extension direct link)
Duckduckgo Search Engine
If you use one of the above browsers, please click the linked browser name to see instructions for adding DuckDuckGo.
For integrating DuckDuckGo with other browsers, check out the full list here.