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DuckDuckGo - Is Google Playing Fair?

Penurious Penguin writes "Privacy-oriented search-engine and Google-rival DuckDuckGo is contending possible anti-competitiveness on the part of Google. MIT graduate and founder of DuckDuckGo Gabriel Weinberg cites several examples; his company's disadvantages in the Android mobile OS; and browsers, which in Firefox requires only a single step to set DuckDuckGo as the default search — while doing so in Chrome requires five. Weinberg also questions the domain duck.com, which he offered to purchase before it was acquired by Google. His offer was declined and duck.com now directs to Google's homepage. Weinberg isn't the first to make similar claims; there was scroogle.org, which earlier this year, permanently shut down after repeated compatibility issues with Google's algorithms. Whatever the legitimacy of these claims, there certainly seems a growing market for people interested in privacy and objective searches — avoiding profiled search-results, a.k.a. 'filter bubbles.'"

116 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. Nobody plays fair by overmoderated · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's all about numbers, shares, dollars and control of data.

    1. Re:Nobody plays fair by poetmatt · · Score: 4, Interesting

      which is why DuckDuckGo, a so called "privacy oriented browser", uses bing for it's underlying searches. Any time you hear "anticompetitive search", it's 100% microsoft/fairsearch funded. It's not even remotely about privacy or security as a result of that. Anyone who believes duckduckgo is about your privacy when bing has your information, is misinformed.

      if you wanted privacy in your search, use a multi-search engine and get real results the way you want. It's that simple, and they do exist. To act like people are somehow " at a loss" when they can go to any website they want to search is to fail to acknowledge that bing is a horrible search engine.

      TLDR: anti-google (and pro-microsoft) article.

    2. Re:Nobody plays fair by mister_playboy · · Score: 2

      I will agree with the summary that making DDG the default search in Chrome/Chromium is not straightforward. Picking anything other than the 3 choices given (Google, Bing, Yahoo) takes a bit of work.

      In FF and Opera it's quite easy to add new searches, even for other sorts of sites like the Arch Linux Wiki.

      --
      Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law ::: Love is the law, love under will
    3. Re:Nobody plays fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Adding a search engine isn't "one click", you need to go to "manage search engines", scroll to the bottom, click "get more search engines", search for one, click "add to firefox", "allow", and then select it from the search menu. The effort in Chrome is roughly the same.

      This is a fraudulent, astroturfed complaint.

    4. Re:Nobody plays fair by CastrTroy · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, just tested with Chrome. It's trivally easy. Once you've done a single search with DDG, it shows up in a list of "Alternative Search Engines" Try it right now. Do a search on DDG. Then go to settings. Under the search section, Click on Manage Search Engines, Look for DDG in the "Other Search Engines" section, and click on "Make Default". That's pretty simple. I mean, they could include DDG in their default list, but then WebCrawler, or AltaVista, or a multitude of other search engines would probably complain as well. If you've already done a search on DDG, it's the exact same number of clicks. "Wrench", Options, Manage Search Engines, Make Default. VS. Wrench", Options, Drop Down Box, Bing/Yahoo/Chrome.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    5. Re:Nobody plays fair by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 4, Informative

      which is why DuckDuckGo, a so called "privacy oriented browser", uses bing for it's underlying searches. Any time you hear "anticompetitive search", it's 100% microsoft/fairsearch funded. It's not even remotely about privacy or security as a result of that. Anyone who believes duckduckgo is about your privacy when bing has your information, is misinformed.

      Are you sure you're understanding how the site works?
      Standard searches made via DuckDuckGo will not result in you personally being tracked by the underlying search engines. This is because your client isn't making direct contact with the underlying search engines - DuckDuckGo is collating the results together and presenting them. In that context, what you're saying is that buying a can of Heinz Beans from a supermarket results in Heinz tracking me - even though I have no direct contact with them (and assuming the supermarket isn't passing on personally identifying purchaser information to Heinz).

      There's no Bing/Google tracking happening here:
      https://duckduckgo.com/?q=test%20search

      Using a bang (such as !bing or !image) is where tracking can kick in because at that point you're most likely hitting a source site. This is comparable to ordering beans directly from Heinz.

      This link would result in tracking from bing:
      https://duckduckgo.com/?q=!bing+test+search

      DuckDuckGo is a multi-search engine. You're only making contact with the underlying search providers when you choose to, and at that point it's pretty clear because you're seeing a Google/Bing page.

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
    6. Re:Nobody plays fair by __aaqvdr516 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Duckduckgo isn't a browser, it's a search engine. It doesn't just use Bing. It pulls from over 50 different sources for search results

      From http://www.pcworld.com/article/245129/are_duckduckgos_bing_ties_a_problem_for_linux_mint_.html

      It is true that DuckDuckGo bases its results in part on those from Bing, according to an explanation on its support center. DuckDuckGo actually draws its results from more than 50 sources, it says, including also Yahoo, BOSS, embed.ly, WolframAlpha, EntireWeb, Blekko, and its own crawler.

      Bing doesn't get your information. Duckduckgo is an intermediary in the process and duckduckgo doesn't store your information.

      It's time to take off that tinfoil hat and start wrapping the house instead.

    7. Re:Nobody plays fair by RaceProUK · · Score: 2

      Adding a search engine isn't "one click", you need to go to "manage search engines", scroll to the bottom, click "get more search engines", search for one, click "add to firefox", "allow", and then select it from the search menu. The effort in Chrome is roughly the same.

      This is a fraudulent, astroturfed complaint.

      FUD; I can add a search engine to Firefox much quicker than that:

      • Go to site with search
      • Click search engine dropdown
      • Click 'Add [sitesearch]'
      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    8. Re:Nobody plays fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      TLDR: anti-microsoft comment, +5 interesting automatically even though it's 100% conjecture with zero facts or sources to back it up.

    9. Re:Nobody plays fair by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      Since we're talking about numbers:

      in Firefox requires only a single step to set DuckDuckGo as the default search — while doing so in Chrome requires five

      This claim from DDG is too fucking stupid to be taken seriously by anyone. It takes people one less character to type my brother's email address than mine, therefore my brother is taking advantage of this name and isn't playing fair.

      True, it's not one step. But it is as few as three (two if the site's already open) (as in my post above).

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    10. Re:Nobody plays fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I fail to see how you can claim this a pro-microsoft ant-google article since DDG uses results from a lot more sources than Bing. From the DDG FAQ:

      http://help.duckduckgo.com/customer/portal/articles/216399-sources
      Sources
      Last Updated: Nov 05, 2012 02:47PM EST
      DuckDuckGo gets its results from over 50 sources, including DuckDuckBot (our own crawler), crowd-sourced sites (in our own index), Yahoo! (through BOSS),
      embed.ly, WolframAlpha, EntireWeb, Bing, Yandex, and Blekko. For any given search, there is usually a vertical search engine out there that does a better job at answering it than a general search engine. Our long-term goal is to get you information from that best source, ideally in instant answer form.

      I use DDG and find it useful for a lot of reasons but it doesn't always give me better results than the other search engines I use. As for the privacy aspect I think that DDG does a good job there as well, certainly better than Google, Bing, Yahoo, or a host of others.

    11. Re:Nobody plays fair by koxkoxkox · · Score: 4, Informative

      No, when you are on www.duckduckgo.com, you show the list of search engines by clicking the small arrow, you see "Add DuckDuckGo" at the bottom, you click it and you are done. Admittedly, that's two clicks.

    12. Re:Nobody plays fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's utterly pathetic that you got modded up when you don't even understand the basics of HTTP and how the search engine works.

    13. Re:Nobody plays fair by blackm0k · · Score: 1

      Yep, it's not difficult in Chrome exactly. It's just easier in Firefox, where the process is: visit page, click drop-down in search box select new search engine, which automatically becomes the default until a different engine is selected. This doesn't really seem so much anti-competitive as simply different in terms of browser design. The simpler process is really made reasonable by Firefox's search box, the inclusion of which seems very much against Chrome's design principles.

    14. Re:Nobody plays fair by ifiwereasculptor · · Score: 2

      More importantly, who cares how many fucking steps it has, as long as they are simple? It's like measuring ease of installation in clicks - a useless, meaningless metric. Shit, Chrome is the easiest there is to configure, because intead of presenting you with a list, it lets you easily modify the search URL. If you invent your own search engine today, you can simply paste its search URL there and it'll work. Absolutely NO barrier at all. Have you ever clicked "get more search engines" in Firefox? It sends you to a page full of weird search-related add-ons, not what one would expect at all. I couldn't find an option that allows me the fine-grained control Chrome does. So that's one of the most bullshitty articles I've ever read on /. (and competition is fierce).

    15. Re:Nobody plays fair by captaindomon · · Score: 2

      So instead of Google being able to track me, Duck Duck Go can track me. I guess it's a question of which company you trust more?

      --
      Just because I can hook a shark from a boat, I do no offer to wrestle it in the water.
    16. Re:Nobody plays fair by knuthin · · Score: 2

      I just ignored him at "privacy oriented browser ".

      --
      Some apps are WYSIWYG. Some others are WYSIWTF.
    17. Re:Nobody plays fair by headcase88-2 · · Score: 1

      Chrome:
      Right click the address bar
      Click Edit Search Engines...
      Mouse-over the one you want (there is a short list of popular ones including Bing, and any search engine you've visted in your history appears further down the list) and click "Make Default"
      3 clicks total (4 counting the mouse-over).
      You can also do the exact same process as with Firefox in the parent, however, this does not make it the default, it only adds it to the short list.
      Doesn't excuse Google from taking duck.com though.

    18. Re:Nobody plays fair by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      That bang is slightly counterintuitive for geeks. I would think it means "don't use bing" not "use bing".

    19. Re:Nobody plays fair by headcase88-2 · · Score: 2

      Possible correction: from the other comments, it sounds like Google got duck.com a long time ago as part of an unrelated acquisition.

    20. Re:Nobody plays fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      .Shit, Chrome is the easiest there is to configure, because intead of presenting you with a list, it lets you easily modify the search URL..

      Opera has done it that way since before chrome existed.

    21. Re:Nobody plays fair by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      Sounds about right. Just goes to show DDG's spouting crap.

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    22. Re:Nobody plays fair by RobbieCrash · · Score: 1

      In Chrome this is:
      Click search box
      right click> "Add as search..."
      OK

      --
      Keep on knockin'
      https://robbiecrash.me
    23. Re:Nobody plays fair by RocketRabbit · · Score: 3, Insightful

      DDG uses Bing, Google, and other search engines. It's an aggregator. DDG is not some evil plot by Microsoft designed to somehow make Google look bad.

    24. Re:Nobody plays fair by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Actually, that doesn't make it the true default in Firefox. If you type stuff into the address bar in FireFox (not the search box) it will still search using google (or your actual default search engine). Since Chrome uses the address bar as the search bar, you have to change the default. From a quick clicking around, I couldn't actually figure out how to change the default search engine used when typing in the address bar in FireFox. Went to "Manage Search engines" and I didn't see anyway to set a default. Also tried moving DDG all the way to the top. That didn't fix it either. Seems like FireFox makes some things more difficult than chrome.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    25. Re:Nobody plays fair by sacrilicious · · Score: 1

      DuckDuckGo, a so called "privacy oriented browser", uses bing for it's underlying searches

      Please feel free to provide evidence of your claim.

      --
      - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
    26. Re:Nobody plays fair by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

      Oh please! If you had bothered to read TFA you'd know the reason they are using Bing is Google keeps breaking the API so companies like DDG can NOT use their engine. The reason is simple...Google wants to know what you had for breakfast because the more data they have on you the more they can sell to advertisers, simple as that. Remember when it comes to search YOU ARE THE PRODUCT and the advertisers are the customers.

      So its not a "conspiracy' its the simple fact that as the underdog MSFT is so happy to have people using their search so they don't go breaking the API every other week like Google does. don't like it? Complain to Google but after their privacy policy changes you can expect it to fall on deaf ears.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    27. Re:Nobody plays fair by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      DDG does indeed use Bing as well as a ton of other sources including their own crawler and he is righ about choice. Keeping in mind at first you couldn't even change your search engine at all in Android's browser. I would not be surprised if it were added because they were starting to be looked at.

      For a website you're claiming is pro Microsoft is seems odd that Google is their first alternative search choice when they don't find what you want.

    28. Re:Nobody plays fair by jensend · · Score: 4, Informative

      DuckDuckGo has made a whole host of guarantees that they will never track you, collect personal info, etc. They've built their entire brand around these guarantees. (Their billboard slogan is "Google tracks you. We don't.") You don't have to simply trust their goodwill; their self-interest will enforce this too. If they broke their guarantees, their company would lose its reputation very quickly, their brand would soon be worthless, and they'd likely be vulnerable to a host of lawsuits.

      Google, on the other hand, freely admits that they do collect and use such information. You have to read the fine print and look around to get a better idea about how they plan to use that info, and they won't tell you at all about the unintended ways this info gets used (here's DuckDuckGo's page about that).

    29. Re:Nobody plays fair by awshidahak · · Score: 1

      If you're a scripter it kind of makes sense. Many scripting languages on *nix-type systems have the first line of their script something like this:

      #!/usr/bin/env sh

      The sharp tells the interpreter to ignore the code (not necessary for a search engine), but the bang tells the environment to "execute this list of commands with the following interpreter". When you use a bang (!) in ddg, you're telling it to "send this list of search terms to the following interpreter"; however, the interpreter is not bourne shell or python, it's google images or the python documentation. That's how it makes sense to me anyway.

    30. Re:Nobody plays fair by StripedCow · · Score: 1

      But still, bing can give back a set of links that contain additional information about the search (made by DDG).
      When you click on one of those links, the website to which you are directed then knows about your search, and then the website can bubble you.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    31. Re:Nobody plays fair by Cyvros · · Score: 2

      which is why DuckDuckGo, a so called "privacy oriented browser", uses bing for it's underlying searches. Any time you hear "anticompetitive search", it's 100% microsoft/fairsearch funded. It's not even remotely about privacy or security as a result of that. Anyone who believes duckduckgo is about your privacy when bing has your information, is misinformed.

      if you wanted privacy in your search, use a multi-search engine and get real results the way you want. It's that simple, and they do exist. To act like people are somehow " at a loss" when they can go to any website they want to search is to fail to acknowledge that bing is a horrible search engine.

      TLDR: anti-google (and pro-microsoft) article.

      Right, so even though this is a blindly ignorant comment, it gets a score of 5, Interesting because it's anti-Microsoft? DDG isn't a browser, it's a search engine. It doesn't solely use Bing for its searches. It uses a variety of search engines, amongst them Yahoo and WolframAlpha, to generate its results. It's in no way funded by Microsoft, it's not affiliated with FairSearch and information does not get passed from DDG to Microsoft. DDG works as an intermediary and keeps no personal data.

      And that's the primary appeal of DDG to the majority of its users - you avoid the filter bubble effect and none of your personal data is stored. Maybe you should've read their privacy policy before commenting. It would have made you sound less like the kind of typically reactionary cretin that all too often brings down the level of conversation on Slashdot.

      Good grief, you would've thought this guy was just blindly commenting without having read the... Oh, right.

    32. Re:Nobody plays fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      So they promised not to do evil? I could swear I've heard that somewhere before.

    33. Re:Nobody plays fair by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      In Chrome when you're are on wwww.duckduckgo.com Right click the status bar, click "Edit Search Engines" and click "make default" next to duckduckgo.com.

      Three clicks. Four if you count having to hit ok.

      This is a non-story.

    34. Re:Nobody plays fair by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      Except they made these promises THROUGH Bing.

      Do you not understand how that works? It's called astroturfing. Microsoft also admits they track. The difference is Microsoft doesn't offer you tools to opt out or export your information.

    35. Re:Nobody plays fair by jensend · · Score: 1

      Bunk. Bing is just one of DDG's search providers. When you search from DDG and it uses Bing's API to provide some of its results, the only information Bing gets is a query text, sent from DDG's servers. Nothing about your ip/location, user agent, cookies, search history, or anything else gets transmitted to Bing's servers.

      Even if you assume Bing is maximally evil, there's awfully little they can do to personally identify you out of a stream of millions of totally anonymous query texts being sent from DDG's servers.

  2. Growing market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Whatever the legitimacy of these claims, there certainly seems a growing market for people interested in privacy and objective searches — avoiding profiled search-results, a.k.a. 'filter bubbles.

    Well it could be true that there's a growing market, and you'll definitely find people on Slashdot who are part of that market, but could we have some stats? Why does it "certainly" seem that the market is growing?

    1. Re:Growing market by FriendlyLurker · · Score: 2

      Well it could be true that there's a growing market, and you'll definitely find people on Slashdot who are part of that market, but could we have some stats? Why does it "certainly" seem that the market is growing?

      Anecdotal evidence: Privacy search plugins like Google Sharing appear to have fast growing userbase/# of reviews etc, many more each time I upgrade and check them anyway.

  3. I call bullshit by LF11 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    DuckDuckGo can sod off, in my opinion. My one experience with DDG results from their inclusion as the default search engine in Linux Mint. 1) Their search results are crap. 2) Trying to replace them with Google as the default search provider was CRAZY DIFFICULT. I don't want to hear about how hard it is to change default search providers to DDG, because changing back was a non-trivial task for me.

    There is a market for a not-Google. Just like there is a market for a not-Facebook. But just like recent U.S. elections proved, being a "not-something" is not necessarily enough to gain market share. You have to be better, or at least perceived as being better. DDG is not, at least not in my experience, and whining in public is certainly not helping.

    cej102937

    1. Re:I call bullshit by KugelKurt · · Score: 2, Informative

      DuckDuckGo can sod off, in my opinion. My one experience with DDG results from their inclusion as the default search engine in Linux Mint. 1) Their search results are crap. 2) Trying to replace them with Google as the default search provider was CRAZY DIFFICULT. I don't want to hear about how hard it is to change default search providers to DDG, because changing back was a non-trivial task for me.

      And how is it DDG's responsibility how Mint is configured? DDG makes a search site and nothing more. They don't develop a web browser or an operating system.
      Go and bitch at Mint if configuring it is difficult but this story is not about Mint.

      From DDG it's totally easy to search via Google: Either select Google from the drop-down menu or add !g in the search field.

      The quality of every developed search engine obviously varies over time.

    2. Re:I call bullshit by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 3, Informative

      Goofy naming doesn't seem to prevent a product or service from getting popular, witness Wii and iPad. I think DDG is a better name than those of web services that add or drop vowels.

    3. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It is the search engine used by defaulr in the dedicated search bar, or possibly in the URL bar if whatever you entered is not a valid URL.

    4. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ddg is great, you should give it another try. it's my default search engine for about 6 months now.

      the bang system is so useful :
      !i for searching images
      !v for searching videos
      !tpbs for searching torrent in pirate bay ordered by seeders
      !php !qt ...

    5. Re:I call bullshit by UltraZelda64 · · Score: 1

      You just reminded me one of the reasons I've never actually used Linux Mint: Its tendency to hijack your search results for their own profits. And by hijack, I mean just as you describe: Default to their own branded version of Google (and now DuckDuckGo), which is a royal bitch to get rid of. I never got past the stage of playing around with it to actually bother installing it in anything other than a virtual machine. And it's sad too, because otherwise Linux Mint is a very nice distro, always seeming to move forward developing their own improvements and rarely making steps backward that its shitty parent distro makes, while most other distributions just shove a bunch of new versions of shit on the disc and they're done.

    6. Re:I call bullshit by UltraZelda64 · · Score: 2

      How about DuckDuckGoose?

    7. Re:I call bullshit by Dishevel · · Score: 1

      Probably coming from an AC that types slashdot.org in the search bar of Google and then clicks on the first link.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    8. Re:I call bullshit by headcase88-2 · · Score: 1

      Wii is a deceptively goofy name. It's weird, but catchy, and the two "i"s look very distinctive among random text. DuckDuckGo is 3 syllables, composed of already existing words, and doesn't really stand out in a positive way.

    9. Re:I call bullshit by citylivin · · Score: 1

      Dont spread misinformation. I have been using duck duck go since mid summer and I find it just as reliable as google was back in the day, before they started adding all the useless crap. I had been looking for a google alternative for years, tried bing and all that, but they all sucked ass. Duck duck go is more like what google once was. Their mapquest integration might not be the best (or mapquest just sucks), so i still do use maps.google.com on occasion, but I was actually surprised how well DDG works.

      For me the last straw with google was when they got rid of "cached" copies of webpages, or made it so you had to login to get them. I also see how much is tracked on my girlfriends google + account and how many searches are influenced by things in her gmail. And the last main reason, is that I talk alot of shit about google these days and using them as a search engine was being quite hypocritical. So suck it google/NSA/US govt! no soup for you!

      --
      As a potential lottery winner, I totally support tax cuts for the wealthy
    10. Re:I call bullshit by Minwee · · Score: 1

      I use a search called LlamaLlamaLlamaLlamaDingDong.

      It finds everything for me. LlamaLlamaLlamaLlamaDingDong.

      It gets me stuff for free. For it's mine, all mine.

      Oh, oh, oh, oh.

    11. Re:I call bullshit by Minwee · · Score: 1

      DuckDuckGo is 3 syllables, composed of already existing words, and doesn't really stand out in a positive way.

      On the other hand, the parody title for a porn search engine practically writes itself. You can't say that about "Google" or "Bing".

    12. Re:I call bullshit by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      It's been my default for a bit longer and I find !devapple, !wiki and !walpha very useful. Most searches have the relevant result in the zero-click info. If you get to the end of the results and haven't found anything useful it has links to Google and Bing. I always click on the Google one and so far haven't found a case where Google has produced a helpful result when DDG has failed.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    13. Re:I call bullshit by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Yeah because Google is much better. I take it the google fanboys are taking a break from ruining open street map data to attack someone else that dare compete with the almighty google.

  4. the domain name story seems like a stretch by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What seems more likely:

    1) He offered to buy duck.com from On2 Technologies (which was originally named The Duck Corporation), but they held out for more than he was willing to offer. It's an obviously valuable domain name so this doesn't require some kind of secret agreement with Google: maybe they just thought they could get more than he was offering for it.

    2) Sometime later, Google bought On2 for their codec (VP8, on which WebM was based). Of course this means they got all their other assets too, like their old domain name. Typical Google practice is to redirect acquired domain names to google.com, or to a specific product page on google.com if relevant. Considering that Google is very interested in codecs, it seems rather unlikely that Google really bought On2 for the domain name.

    1. Re:the domain name story seems like a stretch by bhagwad · · Score: 2

      Jeez imagine Google redirecting a domain to google.com. Conspiracy!

    2. Re:the domain name story seems like a stretch by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

      Except that there's little to no public awareness of the Duck/WebM link, so people typing "Duck.com" probably aren't looking for WebM. So no, there's no reason to direct duck.com anywhere other than the homepage.

      --
      Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
    3. Re:the domain name story seems like a stretch by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      Right, so it wasn't really malicious on the part of On2 or Google for the sale to go to Google, but now that it has it kind of looks bad on Google to hold a domain that's meaningless for them and could obviously benefit a competitor. In the spirit of professionalism they should sell (or give) the domain itself to DDG.

    4. Re:the domain name story seems like a stretch by Solandri · · Score: 1
      The anti-domain squatting restrictions work against Google here. He's running a search engine business whose name contains the word duck. Google is not. If they acquired duck.com and had just put a holding page on it, they'd be ok. But by redirecting it their website - a commercial site which competes with DuckDuckGo, they've committed the example violation listed in section 4(b)(iv) of the Uniform Domain Resolution Policy

      By using the domain name, the domain name registrant intentionally attempted to attract for financial gain, Internet users to the registrant's website or other on-line location, by creating a likelihood of confusion with the complainant's mark as to the source, sponsorship, affiliation, or endorsement of the registrant's website or location or of a product or service on the registrant's website or location.

      That is grounds for losing the domain name and having it turned over to the complainant regardless of how Google came to acquire it. The only thing that's really questionable is whether "duck.com" is sufficiently similar to DuckDuckGo to cause confusion.

      If you have some domain whose name is similar to a commercial trademark, you're in the clear as long as you steer clear of their business. But the moment you try to compete with them using that name, you're liable to lose the domain. e.g. If I owned apple.com and used it to sell apples (the red and green edible kind), there is nothing Apple Computer could do about it. But if I started using it to sell computers, they could complain and I could lose the domain.

    5. Re:the domain name story seems like a stretch by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      But if DuckDuckGo is trademarked then he has a valid point that duck.com now points to a competitor and it's very similar to his trademark.

  5. Lets test the Doppler shift by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    As the Whambulance drives past. P.S.: The win goes to the first poster who says that this is really Bing's fault for some undefined reason involving hatred of microsoft.

    1. Re:Lets test the Doppler shift by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      No, its Altavista's fault.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  6. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by Trepidity · · Score: 5, Informative

    They didn't specifically purchase duck.com, though. They bought On2 Technologies, formerly known as The Duck Corporation, in order to acquire the VP8 codec, which became WebM, and got all the rest of On2's assets as part of the package. It seems unlikely that the real point of the purchase was to acquire duck.com, considering that VP8 is actually pretty important to them.

  7. duck.com by supersat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As the article states, duck.com was acquired when Google purchased On2 Technologies, previously known as The Duck Corporation. Duck made video codecs for Sega Saturn games, among others. On2 was finally acquired by Google for their VP8 video codec, which became part of the WebM video standard. No conspiracy here.

  8. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by i+kan+reed · · Score: 4, Informative

    Since July 2, 1890. You shouldn't ask rhetorical questions that have actual answers.

  9. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

    That... would be better if were spelled out explicitly in the article or at least implicitly in the summary. Implicit in the article made it go right over my head this time.

  10. DuckDuckGo is flawed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    DuckDuckGo has one major flaw: people with Anatidaephobia can't use the search engine..It is just impossible. I tried...

  11. Competition in search by dumcob · · Score: 1

    can possibly happen when developers are allowed to build search engines and analytic tools on top of Google's returned results (a search app store if you will).
    If the status quo persists it is highly unlikely Google is going to ever see any competition in search. Given the fine tuning time and investment required to build an index of Google quality, I doubt anyone is ever going to seriously try.

    1. Re:Competition in search by CastrTroy · · Score: 2

      I think Google is being pretty nice here. If they really wanted to be anti-competitive they would try to stop sites from displaying Google search results within their own site and trying to pass themselves off as some kind of alternative to Google. Really Google could be doing a lot worse based on how entrenched they are in internet culture. Although, maybe they are so entrenched because they make it so easy for other site developers to use the data and tools that they've put so much hard work into.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    2. Re:Competition in search by dumcob · · Score: 1

      All true. I don't think they are being anti competitive either.
      The question is can anyone seriously pose a challenge to them?
      And if not, how harmful is that lack of competition?
      I thinks its very sad for the future of search, if the ability to analyze and build tools around that beautiful index is limited to a few people sitting inside Google.

  12. Information is money by MindPrison · · Score: 1

    and everyone wants it.

    --
    What this world is coming to - is for you and me to decide.
  13. Privacy is the Anti-Google by erroneus · · Score: 1

    So you know. I use Google exclusively for my searches and I use Android for my phones and tablets. It might appear I'm just a big fat Google fanboy. I'm not. I know Google for what it is and I trust it only to that extent.

    It disturbs me that Google would seek to interfere with other businesses. Privacy is a concern for many people and while I don't live in privacy paranoia land, I want to keep the border open so I can visit from time to time.

    1. Re:Privacy is the Anti-Google by Nerdfest · · Score: 2

      I think you'll find that in this case, it's not interfering in businesses, and this is just more ant-Google FUD. There is an extraordinary amount of it around lately.

    2. Re:Privacy is the Anti-Google by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Yes... perhaps... this time. The facts of every case needs to be objectively judged every time. We should try not to let reputation (good or bad) influence us into prejudging too much.

      It is in Google's interest to not allow competitors use its resources. For example, a privacy oriented search service should not be allowed to benefit from Google's resources by it essentially being a proxy service for search. (Grey area there, because what if this privacy oriented service actually *IS* a proxy service? I kind of think that should be allowed.) Some assertions seem to hold that by blocking competitors from piggy-backing on Google's resources, Google is being anti-competitive. I have to disagree.

      Some may liken this to Microsoft's changing of protocols to break compatibility with alternative client software like SaMBa or Pidgin. That, in my view *is* anti-competitive because compatibility should be preserved as these are more about the protocol than the service. (Yeah, I recognize there is some serious grey areas when it comes to using Microsoft's chat servers using clients other than Microsoft's... they are at free liberty to improve their services and protocols, but I disagree with their detecting alternative clients and attempting to block them.)

      Anyway....

  14. This free thing I got isn't good enough... by cardpuncher · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Some time back in Britain, a bank marketing genius decided that the way to get new customers was to get rid of the old charging model and offer "free" banking. It was such a brilliant wheeze that all the other banks had to follow suit. However, in order to make a profit, banks were then obliged to slap on a whole new range of exceptional and penal charges in the small print and to give their customers the hard sell for a bunch of other financial products that they didn't need (and for which the banks are now paying billions of pounds in compensation). Everyone is agreed that "free" banking is broken, but nobody can be the first to reinstate charges because their customers will all take a hike.

    Search engines are the same. Having "free" search engines is a really crazy idea if you think the end user should have some interest in how the results should be selected and presented. But nobody is ever going to pay to use a search engine while the other(s) is/are still free, even if the results are worse.

    So we're stuck with a model in which the selection and presentation of results must of commercial necessity be orchestrated for profit and the more people who see those results the more profit is made.

    You can argue about the extent to which the orchestration is fair and transparent - and indeed whether fairness and transparency are adequate counterweights - but as long as someone else is paying the conductor you get no say in the performance.

    1. Re:This free thing I got isn't good enough... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Free banking in the UK isn't broken. What's broken is the bank's attitudes. Rather than just being happy making a good profit from interest payments and the investment of people's savings they want to make massive profits. Because free banking is the norm they do this mainly by raping you with charges. To the point that going overdrawn just once can, for some people, lead to a viscous circle of debt they cannot pull out of. They would STILL do this if banking wasn't free. Anyone who thinks this kind of thing would go away if they charged is operating at a sub-creationist level of mental retardation or a banker.

    2. Re:This free thing I got isn't good enough... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm lending my bank money interest-free and their marginal costs are about the cost of maintaining 1/1000th of an ATM and a bit of power for a server to handle a few requests. Merchant's are liable for fraudulent charges, not banks. These things that are free simply don't cost the bank much of anything and in return they get to hold vast sums of money interest free. The practices you are describing would go on even if it cost 1000$/day to have a bank account - they happen because they are profitable and they would continue to happen in any scenario where they continue to be profitable. Whether they are fair or reasonable has nothing at all to do with the matter.

    3. Re:This free thing I got isn't good enough... by inglorion_on_the_net · · Score: 1

      However, in order to make a profit, banks were then obliged to slap on a whole new range of exceptional and penal charges in the small print and to give their customers the hard sell for a bunch of other financial products that they didn't need

      Or they could just make money from the difference between what they pay you when you lend them your money and what you pay them when they lend you other poeple's money.

      So we're stuck with a model in which the selection and presentation of results must of commercial necessity be orchestrated for profit

      As far as I know, web search engines have been free to use as long as there have been web search engines. The most lauded search engines are those that present the results that the user is most interested in at or near the top of the results. If they do a good job of this, many people will use the search engine, and it becomes sort of the start page of the world wide web for those users. That's prime advertising space, and, as far as I know, that's how search engines have always made their money. Apparently, it also works better if the advertisements that are shown are relevant to the user's interests. This all sounds to me like the users' interests and the profit motive are pretty well-aligned.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    4. Re:This free thing I got isn't good enough... by rueger · · Score: 2

      When I was a youngun' in Canada - say in the 70's of the last century, all personal banking was free. Banks operated on the crazy notion that profit = interest collected on loans - interest paid on deposits. (OK, probably more complex than that, but that was the story)

      Anyhow, that all changed when Canadian banks loaned a truckload of money to some Central American countries that went broke and defaulted on the loans. Rather than see their shareholders suffer for the bad decisions, user charges started to appear.

      They have of course become a profit center of their own.

    5. Re:This free thing I got isn't good enough... by martin-boundary · · Score: 1
      TLDR. Sorry, "free search engines" is not a crazy idea at all. The fact is that the information that search engines collect they get "for free" from us: everyone who publishes something on a web page. The search engines don't pay for that. So why should we pay *them* to see that stuff displayed back to us?

      Companies can't have their cake and eat it, too. If the search engines want to start charging *us*, then we need to start charging *them* for collecting the trillions of web pages that they collect. It will just escalate and nobody will be better off. Or, you know, they can keep their service free, just like the service we offer them.

  15. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by Pieroxy · · Score: 2

    That... would be better if were spelled out explicitly in the article or at least implicitly in the summary.

    But where would be the fun? Gone...

  16. Re:Oh well by UltraZelda64 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Except that when you realize DuckDuckGo is actually Bing in disguise, it regains the social stigma of using a Microsoft product. So you're back at square one.

  17. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

    This is why it is wise to withhold judgment until you can hear the other side's view.

    No, that is why journalists should do their job properly and inform the public accurately and correctly. Lazy writing is to blame here.

    --
    Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
  18. Re:Duh! by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

    Nope. You shouldn't be able to use one product to force people into using other of your products. Ikea beds and bedding, j'accuse....

    --
    Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
  19. Meanwhile inOpera... by ryzvonusef · · Score: 3, Informative

    Right-click the search entry field, select "Create search", enter keyword in the pop-up, Done.

    (check the checkboxes in the pop-up if you want to make default (else it just add it into your list))

    To search a word, just select it and right click, it offers to search both the default or select from your entire list.

    Yet another reason why Opera is awesome :D

    --
    I am an ACCA student. Got a query on Accountancy/Finance? Maybe I can help!
    1. Re:Meanwhile inOpera... by RobbieCrash · · Score: 1

      Aside from searching through all searches, this is the same process as Chrome.

      --
      Keep on knockin'
      https://robbiecrash.me
  20. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by EasyTarget · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Lazy writing is to blame here.

    I'm sure the article authors were not just being lazy, but in fact knew all this perfectly well; and made a decision not to mention it since it contradicted the opinion they were trying to promote.

    --
    "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
  21. How interested? by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    There certainly seems a growing market for people interested in privacy and objective searches...

    How much are they willing to pay?

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:How interested? by hobarrera · · Score: 1

      How much does google make out of the ads it shows me and I completely ignore because they're totally irrelevant?
      I wouldn't mind paying that much to DDG, and I don't think many other mind sparing a few cents a month either.

    2. Re:How interested? by vakuona · · Score: 1

      The ads have to be relevant to some, and not all, people for google to make money out of you. Google is not interested in individuals, they are interested in having eyeballs of which they converts a small proportion into clicks on the ads.

    3. Re:How interested? by Dr.Ruud · · Score: 1

      Cash?

  22. Use more than one? by erp_consultant · · Score: 1

    As others have pointed out it's very easy to change the default search engine in Chrome. Naturally Google is going to have their own search engine as the default. They are giving us the browser for free and want to make some revenue from their search results. To maintain privacy in searches here is what I do:

    1) Change the default search engine to DDG.
    2) I use a desktop email client rather than the web client for Gmail. Why? Because as soon as you log into your Google account they start tracking your movements in the browser. The only time I log into Google in my browser is if I want to sync my bookmarks across computers. After the sync, I log off.
    3) Think before you search. If the search is something you can't show to your mom then use DDG. I use Google search almost exclusively for work related stuff. Anything personal (medical related, personal finance related, etc.) I use DDG.

    If anyone out there has tips I'd love to hear them.

    1. Re:Use more than one? by dehole · · Score: 1

      Many suspect that google tracks you via your IP, which would be shown when connecting to their POP server to download your mail. Since you pull your mail from your IP, they know its you.

      They could then record the Google searches that you do, via your IP, also all of the google ads shown to you. If you want to be free of google tracking, I would recommend managing your cookies, managing which scripts run, and to never use google search. One should be mindful of other tracking technologies, such as facebook, linkedin, twitter, bing, and others.

    2. Re:Use more than one? by erp_consultant · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the tips. I don't use Facebook, Twitter or Bing and when I use LinkedIn it's only for a quick check and then I log off. One other thing I forgot to mention was that I went into my Google profile and turned off web search history. Javascript is disabled and only enabled for sites that I choose and trust. Cookies get tossed every time I close the browser and I don't accept any from 3rd parties. Without going full tinfoil-hat mode that's about as safe as I can get it :-)

    3. Re:Use more than one? by qubezz · · Score: 1

      I've turned off all the Google history options there are and have multiple accounts that I alternately use for different services; that doesn't keep them from suggesting videos that are curiously like ones I watched days ago even when logged out, so the tracking is continuing even if they say it is off.

  23. Re:Oh well by MachDelta · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's not just Bing. They take results from a long list of engines, including their own crawler.

  24. Holy conspiracy theories, batman! by flimflammer · · Score: 2

    Duck.com was not specifically purchased to be anticompetetive. It was owned previously by On2, who used to be known as The Duck Corporation. Google purchased On2 for its V8 video codec to create WebM.

    Unless someone is seriously going to stipulate the creation and push towards WebM was a deep seeded plot to mess with DuckDuckGo, this theory has no leg to stand on.

  25. There's something I don't get... by Nemyst · · Score: 3, Interesting

    These sites are using Google's (and Bing's and others') results, collating them and presenting them to the users. Why exactly do they expect Google would play fair with that? It's not like Google specifically provides a service for third parties to reuse their search results. They're setting up an additional, unsupported layer between users and Google, and thus shouldn't be surprised that said layer requires frequent changes to work. Google won't stop and ask "we want to change this, that fine by you?" when they see no profit, no advantage from it.

    1. Re:There's something I don't get... by lgw · · Score: 2

      DuckDuckGo doesn't re-use Google's search results (unless that's changed recentlly). They started as an anonymizing front-end for Bing, but now use many non-google search sites, plus their own crawler.

      Noting you wrote has anything to do with the topic at hand. No one is complaiing it's hard to repackage Google search results. Chrome makes it needlessly hard to leave the Google mothership for search, which is anti-competitive.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    2. Re:There's something I don't get... by swillden · · Score: 1

      Chrome makes it needlessly hard to leave the Google mothership for search

      Chrome makes it very easy to "leave the Google mothership" for search. When you install it, it prompts you to pick a search engine. And you can trivially switch search engines at any time from the settings.

      Now, DDG isn't one of the initial search engine options, that's true. I don't think that's because Google hates DDG, but because DDG isn't a very popular search engine. Bing and Yahoo are clearly much more widely-used, so they're offered. The argument that DDG is hard to set as the default engine in Chrome is also something of a stretch. Here's the process:

      1. Use DDG
      2. Go into settings and click "Manage search engines"
      3. Find DDG in the "Other Search Engines" list and click the "make default" button next to it.

      The only even vaguely non-obvious or difficult thing there is that you must use DDG "manually" once before it shows up in the list. Presumably, most users try it out before deciding to make it the default (or before assigning a shortcut to it, which is the other thing you can do on the "Manage search engines" dialog -- I have it set to "ddg", myself, not that I ever use it).

      (Disclaimer: I work for Google, but not on Chrome or Search. The above represents my own opinions, nothing more).

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  26. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by Cinder6 · · Score: 1

    I did the same thing, though mainly because I wanted out of the "search bubble" and was a bit worried about Google's tracking. In the end, I wound up going back to Google. Search results come up quicker, they tend to be of a little better quality, and one tool in particular is invaluable: the ability to specify a timeframe for the results.

    --
    If you can't convince them, convict them.
  27. Re:Not anticompetitive, just stupid name by geek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because "Google" is so much better? "Yahoo!" was a great name? Get the fuck over yourself. Friggin prima donna

  28. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by postbigbang · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you'd read the link inside post, you'd see that the citations were already there, and Google and DDG are both represented by quotes.

    They're not lazy at all. Instead, the post was used to craft a reactive opinion based on only a few facts inside the referenced link so as to provoke a response. This is called: suckerbait, and many took it.

    Should search engine choice be the same number of clicks? Perhaps. But what the article alludes to is that a preponderance of facts *appears* that Google is engaged in anti-competitive behavior. Whether that behavior is monopolistic or sufficiently injures the public so as to motivate FTC litigation is still unknown.

    Is DDG crying empty tears? I think they have some legitimate beefs with Google. I believe that Google is anti-competitive, but I don't know whether they're sufficiently anti-competitive so as to necessitate action to control that behavior. A good fight is a good fight until someone's fighting "dirty".

    --
    ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
  29. You can blame me for duck.com. by mydots · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I started working at The Duck Corporation (duck.com) in 1996, a few years before it went public as On2 Technologies/The Duck Corporation (on2.com and duck.com), and was working with Google/Duck/On2 until a year and a few months after the acquisition in 2010. At Duck/On2, I was responsibile for everything related to building our networks and maintaining all the hardware, software, servers, domains, networks and a ton of other stuff, you know the typical system administrator job.

    Prior to the acquisition, but after going public as On2, we likely didn't sell duck.com because that was still my primary email address and I and a few others still actively used it, and we still kept up a basic website for information about our old and basically no longer supported software; and it was just one of those things still tied to the company with a lot of history as The Duck Corporation, so we decided to keep it. Feel free to blame me, since I always requested that we keep it when we saw the many offers for the domain over the years, mostly in the hundreds to couple of thousand dollar range; and because of my history with the company, I am sure I was a big part of that decision to not sell it.

    When Google bought us, I knew I was still going to be there for a while to make sure all our company data, and some specific services that had to stay up, was migrated into their servers. Since we hosted all our own servers with our own hardware and software and they had to ulimately be shut down, I had to get things moved over and still needed to get my duck.com email.

    So at that point, since I was still getting a lot of duck.com emails and had my duck.com email address for literally many hundreds of websites, publications, mailing lists, business contacts and other things, since I mainly used duck.com for well over a decade, I wanted to make sure Google's DNS and email was configured to still get duck.com emails. I actually had started trying to switch all my duck.com to google.com, but it was an overwhelming process. I still wonder how much email is still going to my duck.com email address.

    I took it upon myself to learn the Google way of configuring their public DNS, email and a bunch of other things because I was nosey and wanted to learn and did learn some really cool and interesting stuff about them while I was there. I made sure the MX record for duck.com was still configured to deliver my email (and a few other email addresses) to my Google email account. Since it was decided to no longer keep the website up, I can't give you a real explanation, but I ended up configuring duck.com websites to point to the google.com main page instead of nothing. So you can go ahead and blame me, but no one at Google specifically told me to point duck.com to their site.

    1. Re:You can blame me for duck.com. by addie · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And this kind of comment is why I still read Slashdot.

      Thanks for the explanation!

    2. Re:You can blame me for duck.com. by bitingduck · · Score: 2

      I think they should hand over the domain name to me now. For obvious reasons.

  30. Re:Oh well by headcase88-2 · · Score: 2

    Interestingly, that is fairly similar to the relationship between Bing and Google, as Bing uses "many methods" but part of that is cribbing off of Google results. Just Google "Bing using Google results". Or Bing it :)

  31. Mod parent down for misinfo. DDG uses google by heteromonomer · · Score: 2

    How did the parent get modded up? DDG uses Google. It is meant for private searching. It has the option of using Bing.

  32. Already happening by Mr.+White · · Score: 2

    FTC is already investigating Google for anti-competitive practice, but not on this front.

    They are more concerned about organic results being squeezed out in favor of Google properties. Instead of being redirected to natural results, half the first page results are taken up by ads and Google shopping properties. FTC is not keen on this, and they will supposedly sue if they don't get an acceptable agreement in place.

  33. Duck.com by Myopic · · Score: 1

    The duck.com thing seems untoward to me.

    Android as a Google-centric OS... yeah, that's true, but it's their fricking OS so it's hard to blame them.

  34. Tax Evasion by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    It's all about numbers, shares, dollars and control of data.

    Don't forget technically legal (for the moment) tax evasion. I suppose that might be covered by dollars although expecting others to pay for the public infrastructure you us is hardly fair and could well be considered somewhat evil.

  35. Bullshit, FUD by Flipao · · Score: 1

    Takes 3 clicks on Chrome: 1 - Right click on the DuckDuckGo search bar 2 - Click "use as search engine" 3 - Click ok You're also asked to choose a search engine when you install it.

  36. Maybe that's a problem, but so is... by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 1

    The fact that DDG just isn't ready for prime time.

    I love the idea, so much so that I made it my primary engine for the bar in Safari on my various machines (including PCs). But very simply, it didn't get the results I wanted. Too much spam. Lots of hits on pages that were Wiki scrapes, for instance.

    I gave up and switched back to Google. Open to future tries, but it needs to improve a whole lot, IMHO.

    1. Re:Maybe that's a problem, but so is... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      That sounds a lot like why I switched away from Google. The results just kept on getting worse and worse. Though what ultimately pushed me away from Google was their insistence of searching for the terms they thought I wanted to search for instead of what I actually searched for.

  37. Re:Well, I use duckduckgo by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

    If duck.com points to their search engine he does still have a point that it causes brand confusion. If DDG is trademarked (I suspect it is), he can probably fight that. The question is, can he afford to fight it.

  38. they need a new name by Nyder · · Score: 1

    I'm not going to tell some to "duckduckgo" something.

    Seriously stupid fucking name.

    --
    Be seeing you...
    1. Re:they need a new name by smellotron · · Score: 1

      Just as I can buy Puff's-brand "kleenex", I can tell someone to "Just Fucking Google It" and not be surprised when they pull up any other search engine. Your complaint is specious because many brands are popular or useful while not being "household names".

  39. Re:Oh well by UltraZelda64 · · Score: 1

    Google fanboy? Nah, just someone who has a lack of trust toward Microsoft.

    And if by FUD you mean the fact that I called DDG "Bing in disguise," well, I stand corrected--I thought the site *did* use Bing for its search engine until another person replying brought up that it actually uses multiple engines.

    No thanks to you for the correction, though.