It’s called Brave, and they claim to not track and store browser history or searches.

As I was doing some research today I stumbled upon an article talking about this alternative browser to ones such as Google Chrome. I do not know much about it nor have I had a chance to use it, but I thought I would share this to our readers as this maybe up your alley.

I personally having been using Opera with Duck Duck Go installed for the search engine. I may switch over to Brave if I like it enough.

Let us know if you already use Brave or plan to try it out.

Here is what Brave said in announcement on their website on March 3rd:

Today Brave announced the acquisition of Tailcat, the open search engine developed by the team formerly responsible for the privacy search and browser products at Cliqz, a holding of Hubert Burda Media. Tailcat will become the foundation of Brave Search. Brave Search and the Brave browser constitute the industry’s first independent, privacy-preserving alternative to Google Chrome and Google Search, which rely on tracking users across sites and have 70 percent and 92 percent market share, respectively.

Under the hood, nearly all of today’s search engines are either built by, or rely on, results from Big Tech companies. In contrast, the Tailcat search engine is built on top of a completely independent index, capable of delivering the quality people expect, but without compromising their privacy. Tailcat does not collect IP addresses or use personally identifiable information to improve search results.

Brave Search will join the family of privacy-preserving Brave products as consumers are increasingly demanding user-first alternatives to Big Tech. The Brave browser saw unprecedented growth in 2021, reaching over 25 million monthly active users. This mirrored the impressive migration to Signal, the privacy messaging platform, after WhatsApp announced a change to their privacy policies requiring data-sharing with Facebook.

Privacy is becoming mainstream. The Brave browser provides the stringent protections users demand, and Brave Search is being developed according to the same principles: 

  1. Brave Search is private: it does not track or profile users. 
  2. Brave Search is user-first: Brave serves the user first, not the advertising and data industries. 
  3. Brave Search offers choice: We will provide options for ad-free paid search and ad-supported search. We are working on bringing private ads to search, as we’ve done for Brave user ads.
  4. Brave Search is independent: We will rely on anonymized contributions from the community to improve and refine Brave Search. Prior to this innovation, producing quality results could be achieved only by Big Tech companies, which took many years and tens of billions of dollars to crawl the entire Web continually.
  5. Brave Search is transparent: we will not use secret methods or algorithms to bias results. We will explore multiple community-curated open ranking models to ensure diversity, and prevent algorithmic biases and outright censorship.
  6. Brave Search is seamless: we will offer best-in-class integration between the browser and search without compromising privacy, from personalization to instant results as the user types.
  7. Brave Search is open: we do not believe in walled gardens and, as such, we will offer Brave Search to power other search engines.  

With Brave Search, users can choose a default search engine that works seamlessly with the Brave browser to provide a complete privacy-respecting experience. Brave will also explore blockchain-based options and new developments, including for e-commerce uses.

Brave has grown significantly over the past year, from 11 million monthly active users to over 25 million. We expect to see even greater demand for Brave in 2021 as more and more users demand real privacy solutions to escape Big Tech’s invasive practices. Brave’s mission is to put the user first, and integrating privacy-preserving search into our platform is a necessary step to ensure that user privacy is not plundered to fuel the surveillance economy.

Brendan Eich. CEO and co-founder of Brave Software

We are very happy that our technology is being used at Brave and that, as a result, a genuine, privacy-friendly alternative to Google is being created in the core web functions of browsing and searching. As a Brave stakeholder we will continue to be involved in this exciting project.

Paul-Bernhard Kallen. CEO of Hubert Burda Media

The only way to counter Big Tech with its bad habit of collecting personal data is to develop a robust, independent, and privacy-preserving search engine that delivers the quality users have come to expect. People should not be forced to choose between privacy and quality. The team is excited to be working on the only real private search/browser alternative to Big Tech available on the market.

Dr. Josep M. Pujol. Head of the Tailcat project

Brave already offers a privacy-preserving ad platform with Brave Ads, which has delivered nearly 3,000 private ad campaigns in 200 countries with major advertisers such as Verizon, The Home Depot, The New York Times, Progressive Insurance, Chipotle, PayPal, Amazon, Harry’s Razors, CBS, and KIND Snacks. Brave recently launched a privacy-preserving news reader, Brave Today, as well as a Firewall+VPN service, and is testing Brave Together, a privacy-preserving video-conferencing service. With the addition of privacy-preserving search, Brave is further expanding its browser into a super app to give users the control they deserve over their online experience.

Users interested in testing Brave Search can sign up via the waitlist at brave.com/search/

About Brave:

Brave Software’s fast, privacy-oriented browser, combined with its blockchain-based digital advertising platform, is reinventing the Web for users, publishers, and advertisers. Users get a private, speedier web experience with much longer battery life, publishers increase their revenue share, and advertisers achieve better conversion. Users can opt into privacy-respecting ads that reward them with the Basic Attention Token (BAT), a frequent flyer-like token they can redeem or use to tip or contribute to publishers and other content creators. The Brave solution is a win-win for everyone who has a stake in the open Web and who is weary of giving up privacy and revenue to the ad-tech intermediaries. Brave currently has over 25 million monthly active users and over 1 million Verified Publishers. Brave Software was co-founded by Brendan Eich, creator of JavaScript and co-founder of Mozilla (Firefox), and Brian Bondy, formerly of Khan Academy and Mozilla.

For more information, visit https://brave.com/ or follow the company on Twitter @brave.


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10 Comments

  • I’ve been using Brave for approx. 5 months now. Works well. We all know no internet service is as good, secure and private as it is advertised though, (“if Satan be divided, how shall his kingdom stand?”), but I’m happy with it and does seem like a very solid alternative.

  • Been using Brave for awhile now. I’m not a techie, and never been a gamer or interested in the inner workings of the thing. My laptop is a research library and writing tool in my life. I also use Swordsearcher and PureBibleSearch, & keep up with brethren & preaching through it.

    Swordsearcher has begun putting critical scholarship UBS notes in the King James Bible text, so I suppose it’s just a matter of time with them. For now it’s a handy search tool, reading scheduler, & the access to older and dispensational material is appreciated.

    Brave’s a humanist endeavor & its news-stories etc reflect that, but they are not invasive & in your face. You have to scroll way down the opening home page to find them, though you may be able to customize it. I haven’t taken the time. It works for what I want to do.

    It’s clean, fast, noninvasive and you can use it to earn money (bitcoin), by checking ads, I think…which I don’t do much. A couple months in I’ve amassed $.60 : – ) I only know that because it pops up on the opening homepage daily.

    If you post to social media or stay in touch with family that way; or go to certain news sites who ad fund, or pay bills online, you might need to disable the ad blocker. Otherwise, I’m liking it.

    • Thanks. I downloaded it on my phone last night to give it a try and it seems nice. It let me set my search engine so I went with Duck Duck Go.
      As for SwordSearcher, I did not know they have been adding critical notes to the text. I bought my version of it about 4 or 5 years ago I believe so I have not updated it. I might look into that, perhaps do a report on that.

    • Opera is kinda “humanist” as well. I like it just because it’s not Google and the built-in ad blockers and stuff. I have the homepage set to give me some news feeds as well but it some of the most progressive garbage out there. Very rarely do I see something worth taking a gander at. I might switch over after playing around with Brave a bit.

  • I switched to Brave from chrome a few weeks ago and it’s worth it in my opinion. I also switched to DuckDuckGo from Google as well. I had done a lot of research and I found out just how bad chrome and google are with how much they track you. I think you should give it a try, really the only problem I could find with it is its ties to cryptocurrency. Also, I saw that you said you use Opera, I have heard horrible things about Opera, like its common knowledge that they sell your data apparently. If you like the feel of Opera you might want to check out Vivaldi. The creator of Opera split and made the browser, Vivaldi, and I have heard some good things about it. It apparently works just like Opera and also offers good privacy, but if you want to go all out on the privacy aspect, I think brave would be your best bet (or Tor if your really serious, but Brave also has a Tor feature).

  • You wanna see something weird with this browser (at least on an android phone)? Pull up the brave browser, then hit the tab button. Now with no tab selected but still under the tab screen, swipe up 5 times on the first tab… does it flip and show a google chrome symbol for you too?! Not only that, but on the browser you still have to configure it and select do not track under settings and no cookies, etc. … I think I read a while back something about DuckDuckGo anonymously selling search info to Google, but I’m not 100% on it.

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