Most search engines—even supposedly “neutral” or “private” ones—don’t have their own index. They’re just façades that rely exclusively on third-parties. At Brave, we want to build our own search index, because this means independence. And independence means choice. Choice for the user to have alternatives, and choice that allows Brave to not be beholden to the policies of third parties (e.g. censorship, biases, economic interests, etc).
Brave Search beta is based on an independent index, the first of its kind. However, for some queries, Brave can anonymously check our search results against third-party results, and mix them on the results page. This mixing is a means-to-an-end toward 100% independence. For full transparency and to measure Brave’s progress toward that goal, Brave provides a “Results independence” metric. This anonymous calculation shows the % of search results that come from Brave versus these third parties. Note that no matter the independence metric, your privacy will always be 100%.
I've noticed the search results have been getting better and better quite quickly, to the point where my Brave results get me the answer I was looking for faster than Google (mostly for programming stuff).
it was bought by a bigger company a couple years ago so there was controversy over what the new owners would do with it leading a lot of users to abandon it and I think they tried to clarify some issues but I think most people left by that point
I use StartPage. There was always something about DuckDuckGo that bothered me.
Their search results are God-awful, so that I often have to end up having to use Google anyway.
At least use Brave search.
I've noticed the search results have been getting better and better quite quickly, to the point where my Brave results get me the answer I was looking for faster than Google (mostly for programming stuff).
I haven't heard anything bad about Brave.
Google is unironically by far the best for most searches (these not manipulated). It also integrates the Google Books search.
Their search results were akin to the Excite! in the mid 90s.
it was bought by a bigger company a couple years ago so there was controversy over what the new owners would do with it leading a lot of users to abandon it and I think they tried to clarify some issues but I think most people left by that point