Google Chrome Adds DuckDuckGo As Search Engine Option in 60 Countries
For the vast majority of users
right now, Google is the go-to search engine on the web. There are a number of
other options, though, and after some antitrust complaints in the past few
years, Google is making some changes to promote healthy competition. That now
includes the arrival of DuckDuckGo as a default search engine provider on
Google Chrome.
As first reported by TechCrunch,
Google recently made a silent change to Chrome which enabled two new default
search engine providers — DuckDuckGo and Qwant. Available now in Chrome 73,
which just hit the stable channel this week, users can now select the
privacy-focused search engine as their default.
Not long after Google turned over
the “duck.com” domain to DuckDuckGo, the search engine was added to a list of
localized preferences over on Github. One Google software engineer explained
that the list was based on “recently collected data” which created new usage
stats for Google to work with. Previously, DuckDuckGo wasn’t an option at all.
From Chrome 73 onward, DuckDuckGo
will be available as a default search engine option for users to choose from in
60 different countries. This includes the United States, but the full list
follows.
Argentina, Austria, Australia, Belgium, Brunei, Bolivia, Brazil, Belize, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Germany, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Faroe Islands, Finland, Greece, Guatemala, Honduras, Hungary, Indonesia, Ireland, India, Iceland, Italy, Jamaica, Kuwait, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Moldova, Macedonia, Mexico, Nicaragua, Netherlands, Norway, New Zealand, Panama, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Puerto Rico, Portugal, Paraguay, Romania, Serbia, Sweden, Slovenia, Slovakia, El Salvador, Trinidad and Tobago, South Africa, Switzerland, U.K., Uruguay, U.S. and Venezuela.
Gabe Weinberg, the founder of
DuckDuckGo, commended Google on recognizing “the importance of offering consumers
a private search option.”
Notably, one other big local
option was added with this same update. In France, the popular local search
engine Qwant has been added as a default option. While Qwant’s co-founder still
recommends Firefox or Brave to its users, he “really and sincerely appreciates”
Google’s gesture in Chrome 73
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