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123 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
123 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3438
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Title: HPR3438: Ten privacy friendly Google search alternatives.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3438/hpr3438.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 23:24:29
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3438 for Wednesday,
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the 6th of October 2021.
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Today's show is entitled,
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Ten Privacy Friendly Google Search Alternatives,
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and is part of the series' privacy and security it is the first show
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by Newhost Haker Defoe, and is about nine minutes long
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and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is Google Search,
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is monopolistic here or some alternatives.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code
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HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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This show has been submitted by Hacker Defoe,
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and has been narrated by Ken Fallon.
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Google Monopoly,
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in internet search market,
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is unprecedented and frightening.
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This Monopoly gives Google an absolute power
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that is used without any constraints,
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and it collects users' data without explicit permission
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and tracks users' activity across various websites.
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And then Google monetizes that data via advertisements.
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Google Search is evil in short, and you shouldn't use it.
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Yeah, I hear you say.
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Then what on earth do we do if we don't use Google Search?
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How do we perform our day-to-day online activities without Google Search?
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How do we use freaking internet without it?
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Worry not, there are plenty of open source and privacy-friendly options out there
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that we can use in place of Google and its evil search engine.
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Today, I'm going to go through not one, not two, but ten such options.
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The first search engine on the link is Sirix, S-E-A-R-X.
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What is Sirix?
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Sirix is a free and open source metadata search engine that aggregates results
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from more than 70 search services, users and neither tracked nor profiled.
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Additionally, Sirix can be used over tour for added anonymity.
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Sirix can be self-hosted.
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Yes, you can run your very own search engine if you wish.
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Now, going through the Sirix installation process is way beyond the scope of this particular
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podcast, so I won't go over it, but I'll post the links to various Sirix installation methods
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in the show notes. You can use Sirix without
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self-hauled listing or installing it.
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There are many public Sirix instances available that you can use.
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There is a dedicated web page that lists all available public instances of Sirix,
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along with useful statistics related to those instances.
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You can start using Sirix by choosing any of these public instances.
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I leave a link to that page in the show notes.
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Second on the list is another open search metadata search engine.
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It's called Google Search, WH-O-O-G-L-E search.
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What is Google? Well, it allows you to get Google search results
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but without any ads, JavaScript, AMP links, cookies or IP address tracking.
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Easily display deployable in one link as a Docker app and
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customizable with a single config file. Quick and simple to implement as a primary search
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engine replacement on both desktop and mobile. As mentioned earlier, covering the installation
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process is beyond the scope of this podcast, but I leave the links to the installed document
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in the show notes. Just like Sirix, there are public instances of who Google available for you
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if you don't want to host or install it on your own. You will find the links to those instances
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in the show notes. Number three on our list is MetaCare, M-E-T-A-G-E-R. MetaCare is open source
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MetaSearch engine focused on protecting users privacy based in Germany and hosted as a cooperation
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between the German NGO Summa-A-A association for free access to knowledge and the University
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of Hanover. MetaCare's server run on 100% new renewable energy. According to MetaCare,
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even their coffee machine runs on renewable energy. An add-on for Firefox and an Android app
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is also available. All the links to these and the MetaCare's privacy policy is in the show notes.
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Fourth on the list is a search engine called Gigablast. Founded in 2000 by Matt Wells,
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boobs strapped with the help of $30,000, Matt developed almost all the code himself. Gigablast
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used wind power as primary power source. Link to the privacy policy is in the show notes as usual.
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Search engine number five is private.sh. It is the brainchild of Matt Wells. Yeah, the same guy
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behind Gigablast. Private.sh uses cryptography to protect users privacy. Every search query from
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private.sh's website and extension is encrypted locally on the client and proxy to their service.
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Stripping away users' public IP address, ensuring that only the search provider is able to
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decrypt and see the query without any knowledge of who the user is. The results are then returned
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to the users through the proxy of pirate.sh and are rendered locally on the user's machine using
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only JavaScript running on the machine. Extensions for Firefox and Chrome browsers are available.
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Links to them are also in the show notes. Six search provider on the list is Unique. It is called
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ECOSIA. Echo, Charlie, Oscar, Syria, India, Alpha. According to the mission statement,
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forest need protecting and so does your privacy. EqualCIA uses the profit generation from ads
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to plant trees in about 20 countries across the globe. Browser extension for Firefox and Chrome
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and apps for Android and iOS devices are available. Links to all these and privacy policies is in
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the show notes. Search engine number seven was founded in the Netherlands in 2006. It's called
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Start Page. Start page itself calls itself the world's most private search engine. Start page
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doesn't have its own indexing engine. It uses Google's search results. Firefox and Chrome
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extensions are available. Do I have to say it again that the links to the Start Page's privacy
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policy is in the show notes? Number eight on our list is Quanta, Q-W-A-N-T. Quibek, Whiskey, Alpha,
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November, Tango. Quanta is a French search engine launched in July 2013. It has its own
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indexing engine. It claims that it does not employ user tracking or personalize search results.
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The search engine is available in 26 languages. Browser extensions are available for Firefox,
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Chrome, Vivaldi, Opera, Edge, Internet Explorer and Safari. Android and iOS apps are also available.
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One very interesting offer from Quanta is called Quanta Junior. Quanta Junior is a search engine
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designed for the learning of six to 12-year-olds. It allows young kids to explore the internet
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in a secure, fun and ad-free environment. Sounds a bit boring and repetitive, but everything is in
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the show notes. Penultimate search on our list comes from the house of the well-known browser.
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Item number nine is Brave Search. It's still in beta phase, but it's open for everybody
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and it is quite usable. Brave brings its own search index, but it is not production ready yet,
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and they at this point in time rely on third-party search results,
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privacy policy as usual in the show notes. Last but not least is the grandadio and
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bananas and private friendly search engines, Duck Duck Go. Ever since its inception in 2008,
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it has become synonymous with the word privacy. Duck Duck Go was founded by Gabrielle Vienberg
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and is currently operating out of a small sleepy town of Palo, Pennsylvania.
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Duck Duck Go's results are a compilation of 400-plus sources, including Yahoo. Search Boss,
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Wolfram Alpha, Bing, Yandex, Wikipedia, and its own web crawlers and others. Extensions are
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available for almost every major browser. Apps for Android, iOS devices are available too.
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Duck Duck Go is named after the traditional children's game, Duck Duck Goose. Next time,
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someone asks you to look something up on the internet. Don't say Google it, say Duck Duck Go it,
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and that was the end of the show. Just a quick note from your narrator here. Back in episode
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773, I interviewed Gabrielle here on Hacker Public Radio. If you want to go back and listen to that,
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the link will also be in the show notes.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it
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really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicum computer club,
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show,
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please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution, ShareLite, 3.0 license.
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