AudioGuy writes "A Guardian reporter, Rebecca MacKinnon, has some interesting insights on how Chinese censorship may be inadvertently leaking into Micosoft's Bing Search engine.
"After conducting my own research, running my own tests, and drawing upon nearly a decade of experience studying Chinese Internet censorship, I have concluded that what several activists and journalists have described as censorship on Bing is actually what one might call "second hand censorship". Basically, Microsoft failed to consider the consequences of blindly applying apolitical mathematical algorithms to politically manipulated and censored web content. The algorithm deployed by Bing may be mathematically sound, but it fails to protect online freedom of expression. Bing failed to take into account the political reality of Chinese government censorship and its broader impact on the shape of the Chinese Internet. Without adjustments to how simplified Chinese websites based outside of mainland China are "weighted," exiled and dissident online voices inevitably lose out. Put it another way: an apolitical mathematical formula automatically amplifies Chinese government censorship to all people searching for simplified Chinese content anywhere in the world, not just in China."
Apparently Google had the same problem, but has managed to write code to prevent these side effects."
(Score: 1) by Istaera on Monday February 17 2014, @09:48PM
I've also been using DDG exclusively for the past couple of months with no problems, but you can always use !g to use Google's encrypted search from DDG (I've not yet needed to). What I do use is !gi for Google encrypted image search.
Another reason to switch to DDG is to break out of your "internet bubble" and receive sites in your search with dissenting views to your own. Google etc. frames this as a bad thing; it's more convenient to show you results that relate to links you follow.
I believe there's somebody out there watching us. Unfortunately, it's the government.