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DuckDuckGo Is Giving Away $225,000 To Support Open Source Projects (businessinsider.com) 62

An anonymous reader writes: Google Search competitor DuckDuckGo announced it will be giving away a total of $225,000 to support nine open source projects, each project will receive $25,000. DuckDuckGo said it performed 3 billion searches in 2015. It differs from many other search engines as it offers private, anonymous internet search. It doesn't gather information about you to sell ads to marketeers, like Google. Instead, it shows generic ads as it's part of the Microsoft/Bing/Yahoo ad network. It also has revenue-sharing agreements with certain companies in the Linux Open Source worlds, and makes money from select affiliate links. The $225,000 DuckDuckGo is giving away is chump change compared to the $100 million Google gives away in grants ever year. However, for the select projects, it should still be very beneficial. Last year, DuckDuckGo gave away a total of $125,000 to open source projects, so it's nice to see them donate an extra $100,000 to a good cause.
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DuckDuckGo Is Giving Away $225,000 To Support Open Source Projects

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Bing and Yahoo don't seem to offer the same quality of results so I wonder about Duckie?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's not Google, but they've improved tremendously just over the past year. It's probably very close to Bing at this point.

    • by tgv ( 254536 ) on Thursday May 05, 2016 @02:08AM (#52051019) Journal

      Depends. For generic, English searches, it works. For specialized technical searches or other languages, I still have to go back to Google from time to time.

    • by Barefoot Monkey ( 1657313 ) on Thursday May 05, 2016 @05:45AM (#52051423)

      Duckie should be roughly similar to Bing, since that's where it draws its search results. There might be some differences due to the fact that DuckDuckGo prevents Bing from tracking you, which limits how much the search results can be customised for you.

      Give it a try - I hear that it works well (Bing has improved immensely since it first appeared). If you aren't happy with the results and prefer Google's, but still want to avoid being tracked, then try using StartPage [startpage.com]. It's an anonymous search engine, like DuckDuckGo, but it uses Google to generate search results, which I find to be better.

    • I've been using DDG as my primary search engine for a few years. If you stick !google or !bing into the search form, it will redirect you to them for the search, so if I don't find something then I try the other two. It's been at least two years since doing this actually found something useful. Yesterday I had the converse experience of a colleague complaining that something I'd suggested that he read (the Symbian kernel internals book, out of print but now available online) was hard to find - he'd searc
      • something I'd suggested that he read (the Symbian kernel internals book, out of print but now available online)

        What a coincidence - I used to hang around with archaeologists too.

        • by DrVxD ( 184537 )

          What a coincidence - I used to hang around with archaeologists too.

          I guess that makes me a dinosaur - I used to work at Symbian...

  • All the "free" marketting doesn't hurt either.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Question is, where are they getting all this money?

    • by JackAxe ( 689361 )
      Without looking into it, the generic adds it shows?
    • by Merk42 ( 1906718 )
      Out of thin air like all the ideal paywall-less ad-free sites I expect the internet to be.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 04, 2016 @10:43PM (#52050489)

    Since it wasn't in the article, here's a list of recipients [duck.co].

    • Freedom of the Press Foundation for SecureDrop
    • Freenet Project
    • OpenBSD Foundation
    • CrypTech Project
    • Tor Project for onion services
    • Fight for the Future for Save Security
    • Open Source Technology Improvement Fund for VeraCrypt
    • Riseup Labs for LEAP
    • GPGTools for GPGMail
  • I like the basic idea of crowd funding, but ALL of the websites I've examined so far have been more or less terrible. The more "successful" are more like lotteries than anything else. Clear success criteria are needed (and the same model could be applied to slashdot, too).

    Before I want to donate my hard earned money I think the project proposal needs to be quite complete. It should have a budget and a schedule. Neither has to be perfect, but they have to be realistic at minimum. Required resources including

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • ..that they're doing fine.
  • But that's expected, since it's basically a nerd friendly front end for Bing.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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