It's not inherently true that the fact that you pay for something makes it easier for them to track you. That's literally why crypto exists, and Kagi accepts it. If you're privacy-conscious, you can sign up with a burner email and pay them in Bitcoin.Exchanging a search engine that can easily identify you, and even easily track you, because you're paying for it, it not an upgrade. Google is awful, but you could always browse in a private browser, or if you made an account, you could use false information. But Kagi, you've given them positive identification, to easily associate you with everything.
I am never going to pay to search the Internet. I already pay my ISP for that privilege.
Nazis. Why is it always Nazis?hacked together from posts in a 12-year-old Reddit thread between two guys named /u/WeedBoner420 and /u/14HitlerWasRight88.
it isn't.Definitely an interesting take. I have been enjoying the experience of improved search, but never really thought about it from a worsened privacy perspective.
This very article spends several paragraphs describing its use of the open source privacy pass to enable anonymous authentication, including making searches even while logged out. You could pair this with a vpn and they won't know your real ip or who the account belongs to, only that someone with an account is making the search.Exchanging a search engine that can easily identify you, and even easily track you, because you're paying for it, it not an upgrade. Google is awful, but you could always browse in a private browser, or if you made an account, you could use false information. But Kagi, you've given them positive identification, to easily associate you with everything.
I am never going to pay to search the Internet. I already pay my ISP for that privilege.
Yeah, and just to add on to this, the fact that most people use google will lead to the de-emphasis of original sources, leading people to not produce those sources in the first place. I doubt kagi can remedy that situation by itself.Kagi is great and I use it but the problem for 99% of people is that Google is just good enough as a free product.
They think that ignoring a few ads/AI nonsense (Google AI summaries are awful) is worth it compared to shelling out for a paid product that is only marginally better all things considered.
I wish Kagi the very best but we probably need an ad supported free search alternative for mass adoption.
They added that AI feature after I was already a member for a while. The price did not go up, so while it possibly could be cheaper, it was worth the price before the AI features were added, and they don't change that calculation for me.Every time I tell myself that $10/month isn’t that much and that I should just use Kagi, their subscription page reminds me that it comes with AI and I inevitably think “Well, $10 isn’t much, but couldn’t it be even cheaper without the AI bullshit?” and forget about it.
https://www.google.com/search?q=%s&udm=14I'm sure that'll continue to work indefinitely. Google has never eliminated or heavily altered a production product with no advance notification.I'm not having any issues with the AI workaround in Google search. I set up a new search engine in Firefox called Google Non-AI
https://www.google.com/search?q=%s&udm=14
It still seems to still work just fine. Just the blue links.
With Kagi, you pay for the product using money. That's it! You give them some money, and you get some service—
Only during their breeding season.That being said, inquiring minds want to know: how often does one need to search for "pierogis near me" ?
No, there are a lot of privacy features built in.You have to opt-in for the privacy features -which is locked behind the subscription- and opt-out of the AI features.
I don't know, this doesn't pass the smell test for me.
Kagi lets you prioritize or de-prioritize a website's prominence in your search results. You can even pin that site to the top of the screen or block it completely.
You can always append -pinterest.com in your search (also on ddg, etc)That line alone may be enough for me to try it out. I've wanted to completely delete Pinterest from my search results just because they are fucking useless. Breadth of an ocean, depth of a paper plate.
"By pure luck, I've been punching people in the face without consequences since birth. I have always been able to punch people in the face without consequences. So I disagree with your belief that punching people in the face without consequences is not an inherent right, because it always has been."By pure luck, I have been on the Internet since its birth. I have always been able to browse the internet without paying to search the Internet. Before search engines, they had index pages, for example. Search engines are an improvement, obviously, but also free. So I disagree with your belief that it is not an inherent right, because it always has been.
You have the open source code for the extension that implements the privacy pass and, at the extreme, wireshark if you'd like to explicitly view what information is being shared between the kagi servers and your computer. But just the fact that you can perform the searches logged out in a private mode on a vpn limits their ability to associate you with an account.You have their word,...![]()
You can do it on ios+safari with a little helper doodad.So how well integrated are these alternate search engines on other devices? I don’t want to switch to Kagi or DDG on my main machine and have to fall back to Google on my iPad and iPhone every time I have to do a search there. I’m already having to bounce between browsers (Arc and mobile Safari); I don’t want to do it with search engines, too.
"The first one is free," the man said.So I disagree with your belief that it is not an inherent right, because it always has been.
You are being deliberately obtuse, conflating "browsing" with "Searching", which are not the same thing. And if you've been around since the dawn of the internet, you know that as well as the rest of us.You have their word, and it is not like any corporation has ever said one thing, and done another, right? Right?
By pure luck, I have been on the Internet since its birth. I have always been able to browse the internet without paying to search the Internet. Before search engines, they had index pages, for example. Search engines are an improvement, obviously, but also free. So I disagree with your belief that it is not an inherent right, because it always has been.
Kagi only asks for an email address (which can be a burner) and you could pay with Bitcoin.Kargi, you've not only created an account, but included your full name, address, billing information, and all linked to your search.