3

DuckDuckGo’s browser adds encrypted, privacy-minded syncing and backup

 7 months ago
source link: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/02/duckduckgos-browser-adds-encrypted-privacy-minded-syncing-and-backup/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
neoserver,ios ssh client

Browsers —

DuckDuckGo’s browser adds encrypted, privacy-minded syncing and backup

It's getting closer to mainstream parity, minus one major feature.

Kevin Purdy - Updated 2/14/2024, 1:00 PM

Devices shown as synced between DuckDuckGo browsers
DuckDuckGo

DuckDuckGo keeps adding new features to its browser; and while these features are common in other browsers, DuckDuckGo is giving them a privacy-minded twist. The latest is a private, end-to-end encrypted syncing service. There's no account needed, no sign-in, and the company says it never sees what you're syncing.

Using QR codes and shortcodes, and a lengthy backup code you store somewhere safe, DuckDuckGo's browser can keep your bookmarks, passwords, "favorites" (i.e., new tab page shortcuts), and settings for its email protection service synced between devices and browsers.

DuckDuckGo points to Google's privacy policy for using its signed-in sync service on Chrome, which uses "aggregated and anonymized synchronized browsing data to improve other Google products and services." DuckDuckGo states that the encryption key for browser sync is stored only locally on your devices and that it lacks any access to your passwords or other data.

  • Mobile devices get a QR code to scan, while desktop browsers get a numeric code.
  • Recovering your DuckDuckGo data requires a code you manually stash somewhere else.
  • With sync enabled, things like favorite links on a new tab page are kept in place.

Syncing might be enough to tempt people with established browser habits to switch to DuckDuckGo for regular use. Without the syncing feature, having to set up each browser with the same items or start over with new devices is a real pain point. Most alternatives, even Firefox, require signing in with a web-based account to keep things synced. End-to-end encrypted sync fits with DuckDuckGo's ethos while also removing a hassle.

Advertisement

That makes for syncing, built-in tracker ad blocking, enforced encryption, cookie pop-up management, and email protection that DuckDuckGo has now built into its browser, along with easy history wipes and a different default search. Extensions are the next obvious point. Extensions are coming "in the future," the company said during a previous release. A company representative confirmed to Ars that there are no updates to extension availability.

Chrome's dominant position in the web browser ecosystem has given rise to alternatives aimed squarely at private, non-tracking search. Mozilla has recently focused on privacy and web safety, including offering VPNs, phone proxies, and tools that call out fake product reviews or spot data leaks and brokers. Meanwhile, Google will soon make changes that comply with the European Union's Digital Markets Act, which mandates making it easier to switch browsers and search defaults.

This post was updated at 8:15 am ET on Feb. 14 to add a link to DuckDuckGo's announcement blog post.

Listing image by DuckDuckGo


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK