Post Snowden-era has been filled with questions of surveillance on the netizens worldwide and that has led users to increasingly turn to services which protect their identity and don’t track their internet activity. Now that Donald Trump has assumed office at White House, privacy concerns among netizens are at an all-time high, presumably due to his stand in favour of surveillance. “Our vision is to raise the standard of trust online, and in service of that vision, our mission is to be the world’s most trusted search engine. We are growing faster than ever as people are actively seeking out ways to reduce their digital footprint,” said Gabriel Weinberg, CEO and Founder of DuckDuckGo. The service was started back in 2008 with the same vision — to build a trusted search engine which doesn’t track user activity — but has only recently started to get a boost.
Signal, an encrypted messaging app, received a 70% boost in downloads, a week before Trump’s ascension to the President’s chair and now DuckDuckGo has been receiving a boost too. Going with the ongoing trend of catering to privacy-concerned netizens, Lavabit, emailing service preferred by Edward Snowden himself, also opened shop again. The encrypted mailing service was forced to shut down following a fiasco with the government in 2013 but has relaunched its service for the public. DuckDuckGo also donated $225,000 to nine organisations — including Freedom of Press Foundation, Tor Project, CryptTech project and others — who are also contributing their resources towards a secure and surveillance-free web. The service doesn’t track users IP address, doesn’t save their search history, doesn’t use cookies to track users across the internet — providing a safe surfing environments to users. The above article may contain affiliate links which help support Guiding Tech. However, it does not affect our editorial integrity. The content remains unbiased and authentic.