![]() ![]() Some of us in the forum have discussed this topic before, & i remain grateful to for telling me about the Ninja Instance of Searx, which ever since then has been my default SE in V. It took me a while to get my head around the concept of meta-SEs, & then the specifics of how best to configure the range of Searx options, not to mention how to choose a preferred Searx Instance. However in that interim period i had discovered Searx. Eventually it seemed that the interwebz decided that maybe SP is actually still ok after all. thus again incurring a drop in hits quality. Then the damn mess blew up about SP being sold to a dodgy advertising user-tracking company, so i abandoned SP & returned to DDG. As i mentioned, my workaround was to change from DDG to SP. From my testing all the several Bing-predicated SEs get poorer results than Gargle, yet i will never ever use Gargle. ![]() IMO the big Achilles heel of DDG is its use of Bing. I used DDG for many years, but gradually grew tired of it returning poorer quality hits compared to Gargle. However if you cast your net more widely, it transpires one can actually have one's cake & eat it too, ie, good privacy AND good search results. In any case, it looks like some concrete steps are being taken against Google's AMP and it remains to be seen how Google will react to this.Qwant vs DuckDuckGo, which is better for privacy It will then take users to the true version of the page instead.ĭuckDuckGo has not specified how its anti-AMP feature will work, though we can expect it to employ similar methods for the functionality. In addition, Brave also plans to introduce a third way to block AMP, wherein it will extend its existing "debouncing feature" to detect when AMP URLs are about to be visited. In case it spots an AMP page being loaded, Brave's De-AMP will "stop loading the current page and instead load the “true” version of the page," before the page is rendered. Second, the Brave browser will also check for AMP-ified code on web pages. ![]() One, it will modify fetched pages, like those from Google Search, to point the users to the original publisher's webpage and not the Google AMP one. Brave, in its blog, specifies that its De-AMP will be enabled by default across its versions. ![]()
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