• authed@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

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

    • nof4n@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      I should have specify, that they don’t block only tor. They block malicious traffic.

        • beefcat@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          If 94% of traffic from a given source is malicious, and I don’t have a good way of differentiating the 6% that is good, I might just end up blocking 100% to keep my site stable.

          Just another example of bad actors making it so we can’t have nice things.

    • 133arc585@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      They have sent out direct mailers that basically equated to a customer list leak; also I’d take a peek at the wikipedia entry about their business model, which mentions some stuff that isn’t the most savory:

      … Brave earns revenue from ads by taking a 15% cut of publisher ads and a 30% cut of user ads. User ads are notification-style pop-ups, while publisher ads are viewed on or in association with publisher content.

      On 6 June 2020, a Twitter user pointed out that Brave inserts affiliate referral codes when users navigate to Binance

      In regards to the mailers, they messed up and passed blame,

      In this process, our EDDM vendor made a significant mistake by not excluding names, but instead including names before addresses, resulting in the distribution of personalized mailers.

    • chi-chan~@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I remember some stuff too. But unlike the comments, I remember it was regarding privacy.

      (I don’t remember what it was, and anyone I asked didn’t know what I’m talking about lol)

          • opt9@feddit.ch
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            1 year ago

            Stop with the ad hominem attacks. We are interested in the tech specs and not your personal opinions of what is “right” and “wrong.” Stick to the point, which is privacy and the tech that goes with it.

            • 133arc585@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              If you think the two are unrelated you’re oblivious to the considerations that must be taken into account when discussing potential privacy concerns in software. It’s not ad hominem to acknowledge that the personal convictions and values of the CEO (and indeed other employees) can potentially decrease the sense of privacy of a product.

              If the CEO is so adamant in his anti-X stance that he decides it’s acceptable to censor access to materials about X, or perhaps worse that he decides to expose anyone using his software that discusses or supports X, would not consider those valid concerns?

              Companies are made of people, and software is made by people. Since people are not neutral, companies and software are also not neutral. The stances of a company or software on privacy, freedoms, etc are all influenced by the stances on those exact issues by the constituent people of the company and developers of the software.

              Consider Elon Musk and Twitter. Given Elon’s personal beliefs and how adamant he is to enact and enforce those beliefs, do you consider him a neutral influence on the privacy of Twitter as a product? There is no way to see him as a neutral influence; he has direct influence by his ideological stance on the software. As such, if you have enough distrust in him or his ideological stance, that can transfer to distrust in Twitter as software.

              In fact, it’s not even about whether I support the CEO or whether I think his stance is “right” or “wrong” as you imply. It’s entirely about how the CEO sees his beliefs in relation to the company and product he’s overseeing. I could entirely agree with the CEO and still consider their influence to be a detriment to the product if he puts his ideology ahead of pragmatism, for example.

              • opt9@feddit.ch
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                1 year ago

                I see what you’re saying, but contrary to Twitter, Brave works very well and has very good security and privacy features. In fact it significantly improves upon Chromium which it is built on top of. It also offers massive improvements over Chrome in the privacy department. So whether he agrees with you that guys can become girls or vice versa, or whether he believes the same narrative that you do regarding corona is simply irrelevant. If you have found a new security or privacy flaw, I would love to hear about it. But pushing your irrelevant opinions on others who are not interested, is unpleasant for us, and a waste of time for you.

                • 133arc585@lemmy.ml
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                  1 year ago

                  It’s interesting how you went from “it’s not relevant at all” to “it’s relevant in general but not in this case” after I gave you a reply.

                  If you have found a new security or privacy flaw, I would love to hear about it. But pushing your irrelevant opinions on others who are not interested, is unpleasant for us, and a waste of time for you.

                  My opinions are not irrelevant, as I laid out in my previous comment that you just agreed with. Others are obviously interested, and it’s not “unpleasant” for them, as people responded and upvoted (and no downvotes)–indicating it’s relevant. It’s not a waste of time for me, because not only did it take me negligible time to type literally three sentences (actually, I copy-and-pasted the comment from one I made earlier, I didn’t even write it fresh here), but it has value to others and as such is not a waste of time for me.

                  So whether he agrees with you that guys can become girls or vice versa, or whether he believes the same narrative that you do regarding corona is simply irrelevant.

                  The strawman construction was a nice little touch. Completely ignoring the part where I laid out that my personal stance and agreement or disagreement with the CEO is irrelevant, you act as if I personally disagree with the CEO and then use that to dismiss me.

                  You obviously have an agenda. So be it. But this conversation is truly a waste of time: you were obviously wrong and as soon as that was pointed out you shift goalposts.

  • TheElectroness@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I wish more of them would support duckduckgo’s bang system, brave seems to, but that’s about it. Idealogically I find the idea of using brave troublesome because of a) Eich’s transphobia, and b) the cryptobro factor (although I don’t think the search page has an embedded miner, at least not from the cursory glance I took

  • janAkali@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I would remove Qwant from this list, because they share your data with Bing, their privacy policy have contradicting statements and include:

    Qwant may transfer to this partner the following pseudonymous data related to your query:
    – The keywords of the search;
    – Information about the browser you are using (the User Agent);
    – The first three bytes of your IP address;
    – The approximate geographical area from which the search originated, at the level of a region or city;
    – The salt hash generated from your IP address, your User Agent and a salt that changes at the latest every 3 months;
    – A random token generated by Qwant.

    …Qwant may also collect and transfer to this partner your full IP address.
    This processing is in the legitimate interest of Microsoft Ireland Operations Limited (article 6.1.f) to secure and make its services more reliable.

    This data is transferred to this partner within the European Union, and may be retained in accordance with Bing’s Privacy Policy for a maximum period of 18 months.

    Please, also review this if you plan to use qwant:
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qwant#Controversies

  • 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.

  • Bernard Marx@lemmy.peoplever.se
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    11 months ago

    As others have stated, you are mixing search engines with metasearch engines here. If you employ browser isolation and obscure your IP address, you can be anonymous with any engine.

    Yacy has potential, and I run an instance. It relies on us operators to index sites. You will find results to be incomplete in many areas, but it can be great for researching controversial topics. When I want uncensored and not manipulated results, I also use Yandex.com and Brave.

  • 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…

      • 0xCAFe@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Mojeek has it’s own index. DuckDuckGo, Qwant and Brave have a partial index mixed with meta search results.

          • 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.