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AI web searching - which is the least terrible for privacy but retains accuracy?


Does anyone have greater understanding or experience?
My use cases are general use in mobile or laptop with systemwide Hagezi blocklists. Also run on laptop using Mullvad browser with wireguard, uBlock Origin and filters. Mullvad is never used for anything personally identifying.

I've been trying duckAI and its very good / balanced when I check against my professional clinical and related legal expertise. I see that FHMY is advocating BraveAI and it is as good (from my n=1) checking against what I know.

in reply to MrSulu

I don't quite see how AI assisted searching would be different in terms of privacy from normal search engine from the searcher's perspective. Biggest issue with AI in the context of privacy is that it gets trained on a lot of personal data and can also be used to deanonymise when used against others. The only kind of information you would give away to the third party uniquely in AI search engine (I think) would be your speech pattern if you are having a conversation with it instead of simply typing in keywords. Duck.AI claims to ensure your data is not used to train the AI, but there's no way to verify if the AI provider is holding up that promise. Still it's a good choice since you don't have to log in.

Accuracy is not very relevant in privacy, so it would depend almost solely on what you choose as your provider.

If I were to use one, I would choose whichever you can use without logging in, and gives reasonably accurate information.

This entry was edited (4 days ago)
in reply to MrSulu

Look at maple ai (trymaple.ai). This looks like one of the most privacy oriented projects in the space
in reply to pound_heap

Thank you, Unknown company to me, so can look at them in more detail, but they look promising.
A little like accessing AI the way SEARXNG orr StartPage access mainstream search engines. Great idea.
in reply to MrSulu

Thank you, very helpful. Duck & Brave both have written policies supporting privacy, so definitely trust matter.