Cancelled Tech Genius Behind Brave Preps the First New Search Engine
[FrontPageMagazine] You may remember Brendan Eich. He was the brilliant mind behind JavaScript who co-founded Mozilla, and then was forced out as an early victim of cancel culture over his religious views on traditional marriage.
Since then, the Mozilla Foundation has vanished into further obscurity. Hardly anyone uses Firefox. Thunderbird is a disaster.
But Eich rebounded with Brave, a privacy-oriented browser. That's not a unique idea, most alternative browsers to Google's Chrome and whatever Microsoft is calling its browser this week, claim to offer privacy.
But Brave recently had a gamechanger by way of integrating IFPS.
IFPS is potentially a huge deal in an internet that is centralized around a handful of Big Tech monopolies because it moves from a vertical model to a horizontal one, in which sites are loaded from other internet users. Think of it as Torrent for internet browsing. And that will make it much harder to take those sites down.
Now Brave is announcing a new search engine.
Remember, there are only two actual big search engines (where there once used to be many), Google and Bing. Services like DuckDuckGo just serve up results from Bing while keeping you anonymous.
But Brave is touting not just a front for Bing results, but an actual index. That's potentially huge.
Brave, the privacy-focused browser co-founded by ex-Mozilla CEO Brendan Eich, is getting ready to launch an own-brand search engine for desktop and mobile.
Today it’s announced the acquisition of an open source search engine developed by the team behind the (now defunct) Cliqz anti-tracking search-browser combo. The tech will underpin the forthcoming Brave Search engine — meaning it will soon be pitching its millions of users on an entirely ’big tech’-free search and browsing experience.
"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," Brave writes in a press release announcing the acquisition.
The former Cliqz dev team, who had subsequently been working on Tailcat, are moving to Brave as part of the acquisition. The engineering team is led by Dr Josep M Pujol — who is quoted in Brave’s PR saying it’s "excited to be working on the only real private search/browser alternative to Big Tech".
"Tailcat is a fully independent search engine with its own search index built from scratch," Eich told TechCrunch. "Tailcat as Brave Search will offer the same privacy guarantees that Brave has in its browser.
"Brave will provide the first private browser+search alternative to the Big Tech platforms, and will make it seamless for users to browse and search with guaranteed privacy. Also, owing to its transparent nature, Brave Search will address algorithmic biases and prevent outright censorship."
This is also known as a Federated system. Being able to do this on the internet breaks the "Walled Garden" approach of not only Google and Bing, but Facebook and Twitter as well. Since the info is gleaned from millions of websites and not brought through a centralized structure, editing search results is nearly impossible.
Expect big tech to fight this with every dirty game they can.
Posted by: DarthVader 2021-03-08 |