Should I be worried about this development?

So far, I’ve tried Stract and 4get, and I’m not impressed with how limited they are - they’re not accurate, and no image and video search is what turns me away from them.

Metasearch engines like SearXNG aren’t that impressive, their results have too many filler results. My experience with manually tweaking their search also did not go well. Any alternatives with good defaults?

  • @ninjaturtle@lemmy.today
    link
    fedilink
    English
    282 months ago

    AI doesn’t automatically equal not private. Its probably still has private as it was before.

    Now if it starts showing it knows things about you, then I’ll be concerned.

    • @CaptainSpaceman@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      15
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      It may not be that simple though.

      Chatgpt is licensing their product to lots of entities and then the licensees relabel the AI as their own with a line somewhere that says “powered by Chatgpt” or similar.

      For example, Bing AI is just chatgpt-4.

      So if DDG is simply licensing out chatgpt, id definitely have eprivacy concerns.

    • @hersh@literature.cafe
      link
      fedilink
      52 months ago

      If you click the Chat button on a DDG search page, it says:

      DuckDuckGo AI Chat is a private AI-powered chat service that currently supports OpenAI’s GPT-3.5 and Anthropic’s Claude chat models.

      So at minimum they are sharing data with one additional third party, either OpenAI or Anthropic depending on which model you choose.

      OpenAI and Anthropic have similar terms and conditions for enterprise customers. They are not completely transparent and any given enterprise could have their own custom license terms, but my understanding is that they generally will not store queries or use them for training purposes. You’d better seek clarification from DDG. I was not able to find information on this in DDG’s privacy policy.

      Obviously, this is not legal advice, and I do not speak for any of these companies. This is just my understanding based on the last time I looked over the OpenAI and Anthropic privacy policies, which was a few months ago.

        • @hersh@literature.cafe
          link
          fedilink
          52 months ago

          Thanks! I didn’t see that. Relevant bit for convenience:

          we call model providers on your behalf so your personal information (for example, IP address) is not exposed to them. In addition, we have agreements in place with all model providers that further limit how they can use data from these anonymous requests that includes not using Prompts and Outputs to develop or improve their models as well as deleting all information received within 30 days.

          Pretty standard stuff for such services in my experience.

          • @LWD@lemm.ee
            link
            fedilink
            9
            edit-2
            2 months ago

            Yeah, I don’t know how they could be much better. Obviously since they don’t host the model, they’re doing like SearxNG and passing along data for you, but all they can do is remind you not to mention anything personally identifying.

            Edit: well it tried.

  • @LWD@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    212 months ago

    DuckDuckGo’s AI is basically a proxy to OpenAI or Anthropic.

    We do not save or store your Prompts or Outputs.

    Additionally, all metadata that contains personal information (for example, your IP address) is obfuscated from underlying model providers (for example, OpenAI, Anthropic).

    If you submit personal information in your Prompts, it may be reproduced in the Outputs, but no one can tell whether it was you personally submitting the Prompts or someone else.

    If you don’t like the sound of that anyway, and it’s totally understandable if so, there are settings to disable it.

  • @Zerush@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    42 months ago

    I use Andisearch, it’s AI, summarizing and explaining better than Perplexity and apart one of the most private search engine out there (active protection), anonymous use, no logs, no ads, no cookies, own reader mode of websites, embedded and sandboxed YT videos in the search result.

    • velox_vulnusOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      12 months ago

      Both yes and no. Usually, when I try to gather information, I prefer if there’s the option to access texts and videos at the same time. I did not realize how important it was, after I tried using Stract for almost two weeks. It is a minute inconvenience, and also that I don’t want to be restricted to a single platform.

  • @ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
    link
    fedilink
    English
    12 months ago

    It will not share data about you until you specifically use the chat function. It’s on a different tab, like the image tab and the video tab.
    And when you use it, it works as a privacy proxy, like piped and invidious does with youtube, or libreddit with reddit

    • 7heo
      link
      fedilink
      22 months ago

      I would not call that a “privacy proxy”, it is very disingenuous. It is a normal proxy, which replaces the technical metadata from your connection, so that automated tracking is harder. But it will not replace or remove any of your input. And you can easily be tracked that way too.

    • kadu
      link
      fedilink
      30
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      I’d rather walk into my local library and ask my librarian for a prompt, then spend 3 hours searching an old encyclopedia for the answer, than ever resolving a domain owned by Brave. Thanks.

    • @SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      142 months ago

      The brave browser has AI already, it’s a matter of time until their search engine does too.

      Frankly I trust duckduckgo more than brave with that data.

      I also do not have any better suggestions.

      • @Ginger666@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        -112 months ago

        I’m not using the brave browser, just the website.

        What is the issue with this?

        How can an ai summarizer online get anything from my phone?

          • @Ginger666@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            -12 months ago

            It summarizes the search results???

            It doesn’t do it for every search. The first searches i tried were things like: “why are people on the internet so stupid” or “how to explain complex things to idiots for dummies”

            Its prolly riddled with errors, but the point is that this is part of their website, so anything it uses is on their servers.