Google, Bing, Yahoo – all the major search engines track your search history and build profiles on you, serving different results based on your search history. Try one of these alternative search engines if you’re tired of being tracked.
Google now encrypts your search traffic when you’re logged in, but this only prevents third-parties from snooping on your search traffic – it doesn’t prevent Google from tracking you.
Ask.com
offers an optional AskEraser feature that you can enable from its
Settings
page. When you enable this feature, Ask.com will set a single cookie in
your
browser – indicating that AskEraser is enabled – and delete all other
Ask.com
cookies. With AskEraser enabled, Ask.com won’t store your search history
except
in rare circumstances.
Ask.com
does clarify that your search history will be stored if a critical error
occurs
(logging will resume until the problem is solved) or if law enforcement
asks
Ask.com to log your search activity.
Blekko
doesn’t go as far as DuckDuckGo and Ixquick, but it’s still a big
improvement
over Google, Bing, and Yahoo. Blekko does log personally identifiable
information, but deletes it within 48 hours. In contrast, Google stores
this
information for 9 months – and then anonymizes it without actually
deleting it.

If
you create an account and log in, you can disable the data collection
entirely
by enabling the SuperPrivacy setting. Blekko even lets you disable ads
entirely
if you’re logged in.
Enjoy Friends....
DuckDuckGo
is a popular search engine for the privacy-conscious. As its privacy
page says, DuckDuckGo doesn’t log any personally identifiable
information. DuckDuckGo doesn’t use cookies to identify you, and it
discards
user agents and IP addresses from its server logs. DuckDuckGo doesn’t
event
attempt to generate an anonymized identifier to tie searches together –
DuckDuckGo has no way of knowing whether two searches even came from the
same
computer.
Its
home page is simple and clean – even more so than Google’s
Because
DuckDuckGo knows nothing about you, it can’t serve different results to
different users. You’ll get the same results as everyone else.
DuckDuckGo’s
donttrack.us
page explains search engine tracking and DuckDuckGo’s approach in an
entertaining way.
Ixquick
is the main search engine from the company that runs Startpage. Unlike
Startpage, Ixquick pulls results from a variety of sources instead of
only
Google – this can be a good or a bad thing, depending on how much you
like
Google’s search results.
Ixquick
and Startpage have essentially the same design. Ixquick includes the
same
privacy features Startpage does, including the Ixquick proxy links in
the
search results.
If
you prefer Google’s search results and just want more privacy, try
Ixquick’s
Startpage. Startpage searches Google for you – when you submit a search,
Startpage submits the search to Google and returns the results to you.
All
Google sees is a large amount of searches coming from Startpage’s
servers –
they can’t tie any searches to you or track your searches.
Startpage
discards all personally identifiable information. Like DuckDuckGo,
Startpage
doesn’t use cookies, it immediately discards IP addresses, and it
doesn’t keep
a record of searches performed.
If
you’ve heard of Scroogle – a Google scraper that no longer exists –
Startpage
is a similar service.
Startpage
also includes a proxy feature — you can open a page in Ixquick’s proxy
directly
from the search results. This is slower than normal browsing, but
websites
won’t be able to see your IP address. The proxy also disables JavaScript
to
protect your privacy.Enjoy Friends....
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