DuckDuckGo’s Bangs Don’t Protect Your Privacy

One of DuckDuckGo’s features that many of its users find attractive is “bangs”. These are like shortcuts that you can use to search other websites directly from DuckDuckGo. Say, for example, you want to search for something on Amazon, you can do so directly from the search engine rather than having to navigate to Amazon first by typing ‘!’ and then selecting Amazon.

Unfortunately the functionality of “bangs” is often misrepresented and misunderstood. There is an expectation of privacy when using DuckDuckGo. Bangs are represented as a way to search other websites on the internet with the “privacy protection” of DDG, but this is not the case. If you use DuckDuckGo and use bangs to search Google, there is no additional privacy protection. This is the same as going directly to Google and searching from there. Google can still track your search and the metadata associated with it.

It’s confusing to us why DuckDuckGo, if it’s focused on privacy would provide a tool that directly takes people away from a private environment back into Google’s data collection. There is no warning message or prompt that let’s users know that using bangs redirects them to sites that track their data. If DuckDuckGo is going to carry the name of a “private” search engine, they should put that into practice from end-to-end and not just selectively.

DuckDuckGo Review

DuckDuckGo has a well-established hold on the “private search” market. Its users are extremely loyal to the private search engine. It is feature rich for a privacy-focused tool, which not a lot of privacy tools are. It has a sleek and modern feeling design which makes for a user-friendly experience. All of this is great but it’s still not Google. Google is superior in almost every way, except that Google tracks you and your searches. However, since DuckDuckGo has these privacy flaws, it’s just not worth switching from Google.

While DuckDuckGo is certainly another option for searching the web, it is not a totally private search engine. It has some privacy protection measures in place, but you should be able to trust that DuckDuckGo will protect your privacy, since their company is based around it. As a result, you can either trust Google’s extremely advanced security or put your privacy in the hands of DuckDuckGo which has overlooked a few key points. When it comes to private search engines, DuckDuckGo is another option, but is not the best. Search Encrypt and StartPage both use much more advanced encryption measures and they are enabled by default.

DuckDuckGo Blocked? Use Other, Unblocked Search Engines

Sometimes a school or business network will block DuckDuckGo because there is a misconception that if you’re using a privacy-based search engine you’re likely looking up things you shouldn’t. While people familiar with the importance of privacy see the issue, schools and businesses choose to block DuckDuckGo. Your school may see DuckDuckGo as a way to get around their content filters. If your school blocks DuckDuckGo, you should check to see if other private search engines are also blocked. In many cases, alternatives to DuckDuckGo are still accessible.

Using DuckDuckGo? Try Search Encrypt Instead.

If you’re using DuckDuckGo because you’re concerned about keeping your searches private, it probably isn’t the best choice. DuckDuckGo doesn’t track your search terms to create data profiles about you, but it doesn’t use the level of encryption that we do. Search Encrypt is a private search engine and has some of the industry’s leading encryption measures. There are too many great privacy-friendly products available to use just mediocre or incomplete tools. There are many alternatives to Google and DuckDuckGo that offer more complete and responsible privacy protection.

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