Google Keeps What Ask.com Erases 59
Stony Stevenson passed us an ITNews article on the AskEraser service we discussed the other day. The Ask.com service is intended to obscure a user's search data - but does it really go away? "AskEraser may remove user search query data from Ask.com's servers, but deleted data may live on, in part at least, on Google's servers. That's because Google delivers the bulk of the ads on Ask.com, based on information provided by Ask ... It may well use the information for other purposes, such as measuring the responsiveness of its systems. However, Leeds said he could not disclose the specifics of the contractual relationship between Ask and Google."
URL's are dups ... and are rough on Firefox ... (Score:1)
that christmas website (Score:1)
the only answer (Score:1)
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Re:the only answer (Score:5, Informative)
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Another Answer (Score:1)
I checked out this site called Way Back
Machine, and I was stunned at how many
websites we're "cached" from way back
like in the 90's. Anyone who thinks
there stuff is "safe" on the internet
is nuts. Even this message I just
posted!
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Ask not... (Score:4, Interesting)
My fellow citizens of the Internet: ask not what Slashdot will do for your data, but what together we can do for the freedom of all data.
Ask me why (Score:1, Funny)
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That's why Google (and all other companies) should have unlimited access to it.
AskEraser is as evil as DRM.
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Google Search History (Score:1)
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Just because you're paranoid don't mean they're not after you.
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Google: DUNT BE TEH EVIL!!!!111 (Score:1, Funny)
TEH GOOGEL HATES TEH MIKKKR0$$$l0th... hows cud tey be teh evilz? It dunt make teh cents?!!
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You never truly know what Google keep and censors. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:You never truly know what Google keep and censo (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:You never truly know what Google keep and censo (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm irritated at "targeted" home mortgage ads for California residents only popping up.
I'm irritated at "targeted" ads for social networking sites when I'm reading email from my wife.
I'm irritated that there is even a concept called "click fraud" (and the only thing that irritates me more than that, is reading sites who defend the use of the word "fraud" in it).
I'm irritated at most things internet nowadays, but keeping search history and using that as special sauce on the results just doesn't work for me. I haven't been at a unique naked IP address since 1998.
I added ask.com to my search engine list thingie in Firefox and have been using it as my first choice search engine after I read about their privacy feature. So long as advertisers support the term "click fraud" and have a degree of hostility towards someone who does not shop on the internet (like blocking content to people who use AdBlock), I don't mind blocking content and I will never click on a random ad that pops up because if I clicked on it, it would be "click fraud" because I never buy things that way.
I do buy things over the internet and in fact spent several thousand dollars towards my family's Christmas/New Year's travel (plane/boat/hotel) that way, but I did it my way.
And yes, I do expect advertisers and those who depend upon them to cater to me. I can live without your content or your good will. You cannot survive without paying customers of which you just lost (a potential) one if you're annoying me. Don't bug me, but I'll call you if you have something I want to buy.
You folks who are happy with whatever Microsoft is peddling at the moment, or Google, or whomever
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As I speak I am typing "beagle" into the google box in Konqueror. 1st result: beagle-project.org, the open source search indexer. Try it from Windows, you get dogs.
I'll leave trying it from Microsoft Windows as an exercise for the reader as I can't do that. On Mac OS X with Firefox and via Google (and I'm logged into my gmail account all of the time), I get beagle-org as my first hit and via ask.com where I have the privacy thingie checked, I get dogs as the first hit and gnome.org as the 2nd hit. (All of the paid ads are for dogs both places). I'll try it from work tomorrow on my workstation and see if I get different results.
My point remains valid even with a ha
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ARE YOUR HANDS GETTING SHAKY WORRIED ABOUT ACCIDENTLY CLICKING ON INTERNET BANNER ADS? WELL LIVE IN FEAR NO MORE!
DO I have the product for you! FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY I will tell you FREE OF CHARGE how to improve your life! It's free Free FREE!
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Dude man, just install firefox + Adblock plus + Adblock filterset.G Updater
Life is too short to waste with on an internet with ads.
d
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I would have said "thanks" but your post contains many weasel words.
Google is the only search engine I use lately, and I find their sponsored ads quite useful. I was recently searching for monogrammed towels to buy for my brother for Christmas, and searching for them on Google resulted in more relevant content among the sponsored ads than than among the search results. I got what I wanted and was satisfied.
I'm not sure what you think I was weaseling out of, but O.K. I have experience like yours. Perhaps the most spectacular "hit" I got was a side bar ad from gmail when I writing someone with regards to the current state of affairs of preinstalled-Linux notebook computers in the US. I didn't buy anything, but the ads pointed to sites which pretty much had everything I wanted to know on the subject.
The California-only home mortgage ads were from Yahoo! served up to me whenever my mother sent me email. Ther
Re:You never truly know what Google keep and censo (Score:1)
We all need to Maximize profits NOW (Score:5, Informative)
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Re: The Tor Network, in bullet summary (Score:1)
- 1. Who cares if they log this anyway?
- 2. Encrypted traffic
And this is all explained in the documentation - which you should read in order to benefit from using it. Yes, you really should assume that all Tor exit nodes are run by a bad guy. But the exit node does not see the rest of the path. This means that someone who is looking at a Tor exit node (I run a few, and I can do this - and you should assume I do) really can see that SOMEONE ju
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"Ask... (Score:2)
That must've been promised to GOOGLE, not Ask...
Not really a surprise (Score:1)
Plus odds are pretty much any link you click on from the search (and pretty much and page you visit for that matter) will contain either Google ads or Doubleclick ads. Even if it's an ad-free site, you'd be surprised how many sites have google-anal
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As for obscuring your searches try this http://mrl.nyu.edu/~dhowe/TrackMeNot/ [nyu.edu] it doesn't use much overhead and well, by far the majority of searches originating from my IP address have nothing to do with me at all, sometimes I wonder who google is targeting those adds at.
As far as I know the "do no evi
Ask's parent is breaking up. (Score:4, Interesting)
Ask's parent company, IAC, is breaking up. They're a conglomerate; they own things like the Home Shopping Network, TicketMaster, Lending Tree, and CondoDirect. All those are being sold off. They're keeping all their "internet properties", like Excite (yes, that's where Excite ended up), CitySearch, Evite, Popular Screensavers (!), iWon, Match.com, and Zwinki. IAC collected many of the major losers from Web 1.0 under one corporate roof.
At this point, it hardly seems relevant what Ask does.
Get Off My Lawn! (Score:3, Informative)
Adblockplus. (Score:3, Insightful)
Click Now for your Free Censorware. (Score:1)
I could be wrong, but I believe your comp still downloads them, and you are still paying for that bandwidth. Adblock simply stops them from being displayed, not from existing. The only time you're saving is the few seconds you might have been tempted to swat the fly for a free iPod nano.
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I have been using Adblock Plus for some time. Adblock can't keep up with the latest versions of Firefox. Adblock Plus does not download ads by default. I can't find the equivalent feature to make it download them
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