Good for them. I'm glad they stepped up to serve the sector of people who wanted increased security when searching the web. Most wouldn't try to build a competing search engine these days.
I think there's more room for competition. Google is obviously very good at their core product, and arguably very good at delivering most of their other products as well. These attempt's like Microsoft's Bing I feel like are just attempts to copy Google's search but there hasn't been much in the way of innovation in years. I wouldn't mind using a search engine that takes an entirely different approach than the "type in a box and get a list of text results" (and maybe a little box of information also)
I liken my feelings about Google to my feelings about McDonalds. Most of it is delicious and satisfying, they have a core product that is the best done, some other products which are pretty good and then some other ones that are off the wall. I generally try to avoid what went into making the burger just like I try to avoid thinking about what Google is doing with the information it collects about me. In spite of any short comings you don't try to copy McDonalds, their supply chain is too massive and well oiled and their brand is cemented in people's minds. Google on the other hand has a supply chain of top tech talent, a ton of servers and stuff, and they have a huge brand. I think there is however room for other types of search even if there is not too much room to take them on directly. We will see the Chipotles and Five Guys of the search industry, things people didn't even know they wanted until they were available.
Not sure if you're a DDG user, but have you seen their ! shortcuts?
For example, you can type stuff like "!newegg laptop" into the search menu (or even easier, the address bar, if you have their browser plugin) and you can search newegg directly. I think the one I end up using the most (at work) is "!java8 something" to search javadoc
Not crazy on the innovation scale (as many browsers let you do keyword searches), but definitely awesome, because there's a huge range of keywords already available
I'm an occasional user, I've heard of the domains specific searchs but I was not aware of the ability to do the !java8 thing, that might be really convenient.
Yeah I use it as a browser plugin so I type that right in the address bar. There are lots of other useful ones (like !hn)
Also, if you currently use google, it's only a short "!g" away (and it uses google encrypted search, for what that's worth) -- I am a tiny bit ashamed at how much I use !g :)
Am I the only one who actualy finds DuckDuckGo's search results overall better?
The main reason, I believe, is that Google's personalized search seems to get in the way.
Add to that the ! commands in DDG, and the fact that they aren't eliminating things from search in the same way google is and I find DDG the better choice for search as well as privacy.
YMMV of course, as the word "better" is so subjective, but I'd be interested if others have that experience as well.
Its certainly one of those things you have to get used to.
I try to pick it up every few months in hopes its better but fall back on google bang too much and revert.
I'm disappointed they took the privacy route so hard and disabled / didn't implement bubbling for results. Bubbling is a pain sometimes but overall I think it provides much better results especially for those in certain fields (e.g. IT)
I switched due to being frustrated with many Google results being SEO'ed to death. Sometimes one has to dig 3-4 pages to find a decent result. I got the feeling that if what I was searching for was commercialised, I should expect it to be quite hard to find neutral or deep results (kind of how when you're looking up a company, all you'll find in the news are PR releases disguised as industry articles).
My subjective and anecdotal experience has been that DDG filters the signal out of the noise much better in 80% of situations. In both personalised searches (e.g. for restaurants, which should be geo-localised, a recent search from Singapore sent me to Connecticut...) and for some specific items where Google has built some custom extra logic, such as movies or "site:", the added keystrokes of !g is not much effort. So I haven't switched back. It does feel like Google is a little smarter on some searches but - and I can't think of an example straight off the cuff - sometimes too smart for its own good and stuck in local optima. DDG offers a less noisy, more generalised view on the world which I prefer most of the time.
One nice thing about personalisation is the integration if you use a lot of Google products. For example, when my brother sent me his flight details, the flight was automatically added to my calendar, and Google Now showed me details on the day including the terminal and luggage belt, reminded me to leave on time and estimated the Uber wait time and even the fee (not to mention Maps can send you straight on to the Uber app with the start and end points entered). These things are either incredibly creepy or, if you trust Google and can't afford humans to do the same job, very useful.
I think it's simpler than that: there's a war on between the SEO lot and Google. As SEO teams get better and better at mimicking a signal, Google needs to keep upping their game to let the valuable stuff get through without being drowned in about.com spam (sometimes the same text can be found in 10 successive clones of about.com) or companies upping their ranking. Then you get feedback loops as people's expectations adjust to the new reality.
Right now, if I type "!g clothes" my top result is missguided.co.uk; if I go to google.com and type "clothes", my top result is nastygal.com (ironic that both of these companies have "naughty" branding, when they are so good at spamming search results). Clearly both of these fashion companies have excellent SEO teams, but there might also be a factor of people expecting shops when they type a non-brand keyword.
DDG is also filled with shops (presumably affiliate links, since that's their business model) but the top/separate result is the Wikipedia article for clothing, which is actually informative if I wanted to read about clothes.
It's a good business decision for Google to have high quality search results. The problem with the previous search companies is that they sucked. Most/all of the top results were paid. There was little thought about relevance. Google won so hard because it allowed people a way to browse the enormous amount of information on the web in a structured way taking into account relevance. The ads need people to keep coming, which won't happen if other search companies are more relevant. The dynamic will be that whoever wins the search battle will end up being the new target for SEO spam and eventually develop the same problems.
I switched today. I actually find the results to be better in my case. For example, I don't have to groan every time I search for something web related and get w3schools as the first result.
I'm seeing w3schools more often on DDG. :/ For example the query [css font-face] returns them as the #1 result on both DDG and Google. But Google at least has the Mozilla developer network as the #2 result, while DDG's #2 result is... another w3schools page. As are results #4 and #7. You have to go down to #11 to get the Mozilla result.
Overall I find DDG good enough most of the time, though. The main thing Google still seems to do better is heuristically figuring out vague queries or queries for not quite the right term, as well as word-sense disambiguation.
I find the results worse too, especially for technical stuff. DDG has outdated or poor results and still does not support search by date (this is something I use heavily). I do have DDG as my default search engine, but I often find repeating the same searches using Startpage. It will take a lot more work on DDG's part to have me use it without getting back to Startpage/Google.
The only times I resort to Google are for recent news searches, search by image and times when even Startpage does not provide adequate results (I don't understand why that happens since Startpage is a proxy for Google). The "site:" searches still seem to work better with Google.
Additionally, I also don't like the way the search result links in DDG get selected when using the arrow keys (similar to caret browsing mode) instead of scrolling the page. This becomes more of an annoyance when the mouse cursor is already somewhere on the screen and a search result gets highlighted unintentionally. I found this behavior can be changed by turning off the "Keyboard shortcuts" setting (under "General" settings), but I don't like saving search engine settings, and feel this default is not a good choice. Not sure if others find it extremely useful.
Totally. Sometimes, when I'm researching something for work, I keep getting results from sites I frequent - sites I don't want to see in my results. I want objectivity and for that, I have to go to DuckDuckGo
On the other hand, I seem like I'm the only one who finds bang commands almost completely useless. For the vast majority of bang command queries, I'm confident I could just type the query into Google (without the !foo) and get what I want.
Based on my last attempt to use DDG (which, admittedly, was a few years ago) I found myself needing to add !g much more often than finding uses for other bang commands.
I also love the !bang syntax. I generally find DDG results not only more useful than Google, but presented in a more appealing way. However, I use DDG primarily because it respects user privacy and is not targeting me with pervasive tracking techniques.
The problem with DDG, as much as I respect their efforts and their official discourse, is that you really can't be sure they aren't tracking users based on some secret court order.
For this reason, I still have a very hard time trusting them in any meaningful sense.
anxiety
n. A state of uneasiness and apprehension, as about future uncertainties.
n. A cause of anxiety: For some people, air travel is a real anxiety.
n. Psychiatry A state of apprehension, uncertainty, and fear resulting from
the anticipation of a *realistic* or fantasized threatening event or situation,
often impairing physical and psychological functioning.
Like a few other comments here, I switched to ddg a few months ago and only rarely need to go back to google. In fact, it's kind of nice to have a few places to search now (google, bing, ddg), reminds me of the old internet search engine war days.
Unlike the article, I didn't do it for security reasons, I actually gave it a go and found the search results better for most of the things I search for. And if I don't find what I want I can !g and it'll take me right to google's results so I get a direct like-for-like comparison.
I also generally like how DDG presents the results better than google. Little details like checkboxes next to places I've already been are super helpful and I miss those little touches in google. There's tons of little touches like that all over DDG.
I find about 1:30 searches I hit google for and maybe only half of those do I find anything anyway.
About the only think I don't like about DDG is the image search, google is far superior here still. And google sometimes does a better job bringing up maps of places I'm searching for. But I don't see changing back anytime soon and getting better personal security "for free" is a nice side effect.
It also brings into question how important google's personalized searches are for relevancy if DDG can provide equivalent results without needing that information.
Little details like checkboxes next to places I've already been are super helpful and I miss those little touches in google.
Google does do this, and in a less subtle way -- it applies the classic, purple styling to visited links.
Still, I find your comments compelling enough to give DDG a shot. I found the results inadequate when I last tried a year or so ago -- I found myself using !g more often than not, which led me to abandon DDG altogether.
Well, it's a CSS thing these days (a:visited), and something that an awful lot of other sites these days sacrifice in favor of looking more shiny and uniform.
Yes, it is a feature of the default browser stylesheet, but many websites override it. DuckDuckGo, for instance, keeps all of its links black and uses the :visited pseudo class to show the checkmark.
Even if it's default browser behavior, keeping it around is a specific design decision.
DDG's !bang searches convinced me to use it as my default search. Being able to search various sites from the address bar is really useful. And if their results are ever poor, I can always get to Google with just a !g. I know you could do that before with keyword searches, but with DDG I don't have to worry about setting it up.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but to use the !bang system you have to memorize the short form for every site or service you want to use it for, is that right?
For example, amazon.co.uk is !amazonuk - I don't see the meaningful improvement there.
DDG has six thousand of them, most of which don't benefit from a great shortening of the name. To search answers.com it's !answers - that's an extremely small improvement over site:answers.com given the need to memorize a bang for each thing you want to use it against.
As mentioned elsewhere in the thread, DDG also supports use of "site:amazon.co.uk." So, you have the option to memorize the short form for what I presume to be the sites you personally search for the most.
This is interesting: it is one way to allow for a better search experience through personalized search options without using data collected about me.
That's not a reasonable assumption that it would keep growing that fast. But still interesting to know for when people lambast DDG for being a fraction of google's volume.
I haven't done a deep dive into how DDG works, but "In Partnership with Yandex" is on the search results. Yandex is a Russian search engine, and while you may find the NSA snooping intrusive and obnoxious, Russia isn't exactly a privacy-respecting libertarian utopia. No one ever seems to mention the Russian connection in discussions about DDG, though. If this is something you've considered and reckoned through to it not being a concern, I would be quite interested in your reasoning.
56 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 81.2 ms ] threadI've been using DDG since I heard about it.
I liken my feelings about Google to my feelings about McDonalds. Most of it is delicious and satisfying, they have a core product that is the best done, some other products which are pretty good and then some other ones that are off the wall. I generally try to avoid what went into making the burger just like I try to avoid thinking about what Google is doing with the information it collects about me. In spite of any short comings you don't try to copy McDonalds, their supply chain is too massive and well oiled and their brand is cemented in people's minds. Google on the other hand has a supply chain of top tech talent, a ton of servers and stuff, and they have a huge brand. I think there is however room for other types of search even if there is not too much room to take them on directly. We will see the Chipotles and Five Guys of the search industry, things people didn't even know they wanted until they were available.
For example, you can type stuff like "!newegg laptop" into the search menu (or even easier, the address bar, if you have their browser plugin) and you can search newegg directly. I think the one I end up using the most (at work) is "!java8 something" to search javadoc
Not crazy on the innovation scale (as many browsers let you do keyword searches), but definitely awesome, because there's a huge range of keywords already available
Also, if you currently use google, it's only a short "!g" away (and it uses google encrypted search, for what that's worth) -- I am a tiny bit ashamed at how much I use !g :)
https://duck.co/help/results/sources
The main reason, I believe, is that Google's personalized search seems to get in the way.
Add to that the ! commands in DDG, and the fact that they aren't eliminating things from search in the same way google is and I find DDG the better choice for search as well as privacy.
YMMV of course, as the word "better" is so subjective, but I'd be interested if others have that experience as well.
I try to pick it up every few months in hopes its better but fall back on google bang too much and revert.
I'm disappointed they took the privacy route so hard and disabled / didn't implement bubbling for results. Bubbling is a pain sometimes but overall I think it provides much better results especially for those in certain fields (e.g. IT)
My subjective and anecdotal experience has been that DDG filters the signal out of the noise much better in 80% of situations. In both personalised searches (e.g. for restaurants, which should be geo-localised, a recent search from Singapore sent me to Connecticut...) and for some specific items where Google has built some custom extra logic, such as movies or "site:", the added keystrokes of !g is not much effort. So I haven't switched back. It does feel like Google is a little smarter on some searches but - and I can't think of an example straight off the cuff - sometimes too smart for its own good and stuck in local optima. DDG offers a less noisy, more generalised view on the world which I prefer most of the time.
One nice thing about personalisation is the integration if you use a lot of Google products. For example, when my brother sent me his flight details, the flight was automatically added to my calendar, and Google Now showed me details on the day including the terminal and luggage belt, reminded me to leave on time and estimated the Uber wait time and even the fee (not to mention Maps can send you straight on to the Uber app with the start and end points entered). These things are either incredibly creepy or, if you trust Google and can't afford humans to do the same job, very useful.
* in fact speed is my main gripe with DDG. After years of getting used to almost instant results, waiting a few seconds is frustrating...
I suspect the techies that implemented the services initially had the best of intentions with them.
But then comes the suits further up the chain, that has as their primary motivation to maximize ROI.
Right now, if I type "!g clothes" my top result is missguided.co.uk; if I go to google.com and type "clothes", my top result is nastygal.com (ironic that both of these companies have "naughty" branding, when they are so good at spamming search results). Clearly both of these fashion companies have excellent SEO teams, but there might also be a factor of people expecting shops when they type a non-brand keyword.
DDG is also filled with shops (presumably affiliate links, since that's their business model) but the top/separate result is the Wikipedia article for clothing, which is actually informative if I wanted to read about clothes.
It's a good business decision for Google to have high quality search results. The problem with the previous search companies is that they sucked. Most/all of the top results were paid. There was little thought about relevance. Google won so hard because it allowed people a way to browse the enormous amount of information on the web in a structured way taking into account relevance. The ads need people to keep coming, which won't happen if other search companies are more relevant. The dynamic will be that whoever wins the search battle will end up being the new target for SEO spam and eventually develop the same problems.
At least for vague technical queries, I still find googles results vastly superior, consistently .
However the ! commands are what keep me using DDG. They're a gamechanger.
Overall I find DDG good enough most of the time, though. The main thing Google still seems to do better is heuristically figuring out vague queries or queries for not quite the right term, as well as word-sense disambiguation.
The only times I resort to Google are for recent news searches, search by image and times when even Startpage does not provide adequate results (I don't understand why that happens since Startpage is a proxy for Google). The "site:" searches still seem to work better with Google.
Additionally, I also don't like the way the search result links in DDG get selected when using the arrow keys (similar to caret browsing mode) instead of scrolling the page. This becomes more of an annoyance when the mouse cursor is already somewhere on the screen and a search result gets highlighted unintentionally. I found this behavior can be changed by turning off the "Keyboard shortcuts" setting (under "General" settings), but I don't like saving search engine settings, and feel this default is not a good choice. Not sure if others find it extremely useful.
Based on my last attempt to use DDG (which, admittedly, was a few years ago) I found myself needing to add !g much more often than finding uses for other bang commands.
For this reason, I still have a very hard time trusting them in any meaningful sense.
"How DDG Rode a Wave of Post-Snowden Security Concerns to Massive Growth"
We have legit reasons to fear the NSA spying after Snowden.
Unlike the article, I didn't do it for security reasons, I actually gave it a go and found the search results better for most of the things I search for. And if I don't find what I want I can !g and it'll take me right to google's results so I get a direct like-for-like comparison.
I also generally like how DDG presents the results better than google. Little details like checkboxes next to places I've already been are super helpful and I miss those little touches in google. There's tons of little touches like that all over DDG.
I find about 1:30 searches I hit google for and maybe only half of those do I find anything anyway.
About the only think I don't like about DDG is the image search, google is far superior here still. And google sometimes does a better job bringing up maps of places I'm searching for. But I don't see changing back anytime soon and getting better personal security "for free" is a nice side effect.
It also brings into question how important google's personalized searches are for relevancy if DDG can provide equivalent results without needing that information.
Google does do this, and in a less subtle way -- it applies the classic, purple styling to visited links.
Still, I find your comments compelling enough to give DDG a shot. I found the results inadequate when I last tried a year or so ago -- I found myself using !g more often than not, which led me to abandon DDG altogether.
Even if it's default browser behavior, keeping it around is a specific design decision.
I have a similar reaction to maps, and for that !maps does the trick.
Like when I search for general things in google it will show me stuff around my area first, whereas in DDG its just generic and could be anywhere.
1) Type in your city for example "news new york" "pizza toronto"
2) localization toggle - this sets country specific results
It's a bit of change in search style but you can get great local results while still being private
"How DDG attached itself to <latest event> to make it look like it's popular"
I have nothing for or against DDG but it's like once a month I see what looks like pro-DDG propaganda.
That's a lot less to type
For example, amazon.co.uk is !amazonuk - I don't see the meaningful improvement there.
DDG has six thousand of them, most of which don't benefit from a great shortening of the name. To search answers.com it's !answers - that's an extremely small improvement over site:answers.com given the need to memorize a bang for each thing you want to use it against.
Maybe most of them don't benefit a great shortening of the name, but the most common do.
And for the other, like answers.com, !answers is still 8 characters shorter than site:answers.com
You should really try to use bangs for a while, I'm sure you would see the appeal very quickly
This is interesting: it is one way to allow for a better search experience through personalized search options without using data collected about me.
https://duckduckgo.com/traffic.html
That's not a reasonable assumption that it would keep growing that fast. But still interesting to know for when people lambast DDG for being a fraction of google's volume.