I really hope no one in this community uses Google as their search engine.
Google Search is way worse than it used to but still beats DDG by a mile.
I’ve tried SearX and it was meh, maybe there’s some better instance than the one I tried though.
Yandex is good for reverse image search and when the American government makes western search engines block certain search results, but not that useful in general. Also for a period Yandex just kept bombarding me with endless captchas and was completely unusuable
Bing search is just DDG, or well DDG is just Bing.
Baidu search, tbh haven’t tried it much, but even for chinese I had better search results on google search so yeah
DDG is still really good, and DDG isn’t Bing just because it includes it’s results as well. I mainly use DDG and then try Google if I can’t find my result, but 90% of the time DDG finds it just fine.
I use https://searx.be/ with both Google and DDG results enabled. Otherwise if you want something like Google results you would have to use Start page, although they pay Google for access to their search so you would be indirectly supporting Google.
I tried using DuckDuckGo but just could not stick with it. The search terms are just not as good and sometimes when I’m looking up definitions for words I’d prefer not clicking on a link and just having it display on the display results.
It’s just small issues like that made me switch back to google search. Won’t ever switch back to chrome though.
I primarily use DuckDuckGo now, but very occasionally I use google when I feel like DuckDuckGo hasn’t come up with very good results.
(I also use Google when I need a word definition - I like the layout and ability to see synonyms quickly.)
Bing I don’t use because I just can’t stand the results page layout.
Any other recommendations?
If you’re already using duckduckgo, you can just add !g in front of your search term if you aren’t happy with the results.
It sends your search to google but without connecting your search with your ip.
And if you use an ad blocker, google doesn’t even get anything out of it, other than server costs.
(I also use Google when I need a word definition - I like the layout and ability to see synonyms quickly.)
yeah that’s one thing I really miss from when I had google as default search engine, typing word/phrase + define and actually getting a useful result. DDGs version is barely even helpful at all
SearXNG is my go to. It’s a search aggregator so you have to configure it to select your preferred search engines, but once everything is up and running, I’ve found it’s results to be even higher quality than Google’s
You can use Startpage to get Google search results. It’s a meta search engine for Google, but it doesn’t expose any of your data. You can use it with DuckDuckGo’s Bangs feature. That way, DuckDuckGo can be your default search engine and you can make all of your normal search queries with DDG, but if you want to search on Google through Startpage, you just type !sp followed by your search query into DuckDuckGo and it will forward your search to Startpage. This also works with many many other sites, type !bangs into DDG to get the full list of supported websites.
Bing nowdays result is better than Google,just DDG result still not 100% good as bing… so… I choose bing for now…
This is the best summary I could come up with:
YouTube can instantly switch up its ad delivery system, but once Manifest V3 becomes mandatory, that won’t be true for extension developers.
If ad blocking is a cat-and-mouse game of updates and counter-updates, then Google will force the mouse to slow down.
The current platform, Manifest V2, has been around for over ten years and works just fine, but it’s also quite powerful and allows extensions to have full filtering control over the traffic your web browser sees.
Engadget’s Anthony Ha interviewed some developers in the filtering extension community, and they described a constant cat-and-mouse game with YouTube.
Firefox’s Manifest V3 implementation doesn’t come with the filtering limitations, and parent company Mozilla promises that users can “rest assured that in spite of these changes to Chrome’s new extensions architecture, Firefox’s implementation of Manifest V3 ensures users can access the most effective privacy tools available like uBlock Origin and other content-blocking and privacy-preserving extensions.”
Google claims that Manifest V3 will improve browser “privacy, security, and performance,” but every comment we can find from groups that aren’t giant ad companies disputes this description.
The original article contains 915 words, the summary contains 179 words. Saved 80%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Firefox is best, but if you use linux and still like using Chrome for some things you can try Ungoogled Chromium
If you aren’t already trying to remove Google from your life, you should be.
More people should use firefox
I’d already be happy if we still have the ones we have today in ten years.
Yup, there’s 3-4 active ones, depending on how you count it (more if you count toy projects):
- Blink - Chrome
- WebKit - Safari
- Gecko - Firefox
- KHTML - Konqueror, discontinued this year in favor of WebKit
So essentially three, though Blink is a fork of WebKit, so kinda 2.5.