Private Now

Private Now




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Private Now
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If you're new to iPhone, get helpful tips to use Chrome with this step-by-step guide .

If you don’t want Google Chrome to remember your activity, you can browse the web privately in Incognito mode. 
You can also use a keyboard shortcut to open an Incognito window:
You can switch between Incognito windows and regular Chrome windows. You'll only browse in private when you're using an Incognito window.
You can also choose to block third-party cookies when you open a new incognito window. Learn more about cookies .
Incognito mode runs in a separate window from your normal Chrome windows.
If you have an Incognito window open and you open another one, your private browsing session will continue in the new window. To exit Incognito mode, close all Incognito windows.
If you see a number next to the Incognito icon at the top right, you have more than one Incognito window open. To close an Incognito window:





Privnote


Send notes that will self-destruct after being read.


With Privnote you can send notes that will self-destruct after being read.
1. Write the note below, encrypt it and get a link.
2. Send the link to whom you want to read the note.
3. The note will self-destruct after being read by the recipient.

By clicking the options button, you can specify a manual password to encrypt the note, set an expiration date and be notified when the note is destroyed.

To know more about how Privnote works, check out the
about page .




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Copy the link, paste it into an email or instant message and send it to whom you want to read the note.

Don't forget to send the password as well.
Use a different method to send it for increased security.






The note will self-destruct after reading it.

The note will self-destruct in .




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Privnote Ver. 1.1-44-g58c8928 / 2018-05-25 |
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Learn it in our Privacy Policy.
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If this message does not dissapear after a while it means that Privnote does not work in your browser.
Please check that JavaScript is enabled.
If the problem persists, send us an e-mail at support@privnote.com with your browser name and version and we'll do our best to fix the problem.

Please wait while the note is encrypted in your browser and then stored in Privnote.





Privnote


Send notes that will self-destruct after being read.


With Privnote you can send notes that will self-destruct after being read.
1. Write the note below, encrypt it and get a link.
2. Send the link to whom you want to read the note.
3. The note will self-destruct after being read by the recipient.

By clicking the options button, you can specify a manual password to encrypt the note, set an expiration date and be notified when the note is destroyed.

To know more about how Privnote works, check out the
about page .




after reading it
1 hour from now
24 hours from now
7 days from now
30 days from now






Do not ask for confirmation before showing and destroying the note.




Enter a custom password to encrypt the note

Very weak
Weak
Good
Strong
Very strong




Confirm password

The passwords do not match.




E-mail to notify when note is destroyed

Invalid e-mail address.




Reference name for the note (optional)




Tip: bookmark the page now so you don't have to input these advanced options again.


Error talking to Privnote server. Please check your Internet connection and try again


Copy the link, paste it into an email or instant message and send it to whom you want to read the note.

Don't forget to send the password as well.
Use a different method to send it for increased security.






The note will self-destruct after reading it.

The note will self-destruct in .




Destroy note now


Read note



Password necessary to read the note




Show password
Hide password


Write a new note
Share your comments


Support
Privacy
About



Blog
Twitter
Facebook




Deutsch
English
Español
Français
Italiano
Polski
Português
Romana
Русский
Svenska
Türkçe
українська мова
汉语
漢語
čeština
Dutch
ไทย
(Browser default)


Translate into your language!


Privnote Ver. 1.1-44-g58c8928 / 2018-05-25 |
© Ikatu


Privnote uses cookies.
Learn it in our Privacy Policy.
Got it!



If this message does not dissapear after a while it means that Privnote does not work in your browser.
Please check that JavaScript is enabled.
If the problem persists, send us an e-mail at support@privnote.com with your browser name and version and we'll do our best to fix the problem.

Please wait while the note is encrypted in your browser and then stored in Privnote.

Header Search Search site Submit search
July 30, 2022 By Sven Taylor — 430 Comments

RestorePrivacy Checklist



Secure browser : Modified Firefox or Brave VPN : NordVPN ( 68% Off Coupon ) or Surfshark Ad blocker : uBlock Origin or AdGuard Secure email : Mailfence or Tutanota Secure Messenger : Signal or Threema Private search engine : MetaGer or Swisscows Password manager : NordPass or Bitwarden

Resources to stay safe and secure online
This guide aims to be the most in-depth resource available on private search engines. For this 2022 update, we examine the best private search engines, search results censorship, and how to keep your data safe and secure when searching online.
In today’s world, search engines are a necessity to find what you’re looking for online. Unfortunately, however, there are two big problems you will likely encounter:
This private search engines guide will thoroughly examine both of these problems and provide you with the best reliable solutions and alternatives we can find. So let’s begin by examining the first problem with search engine privacy.
It is sad to say, but most of the big search engines today serve as data collection tools for advertising companies . That’s right, they collect your private data and use it to make money with targeted ads. This is a booming industry where your data ends up in the hands of third parties and you are the product .
Here is the information being collected by some of the larger (not private) search engines:
As you may know, the items you enter into a search engine can disclose highly personal information about you. Things like as medical conditions, employment status, financial information, political beliefs, and other private details. This data can be collected, stored, and linked to detailed digital profiles which can even contain your real identity. The only way to ensure that your data is safe is to keep it out of the hands of the data collectors. To do that, you need to use a private search engine .
Many people are getting fed up with online censorship, particularly when trying to find specific information that was previously available. Censorship can take many forms. With search engines today, censorship can come from filtering, manipulating, and/or blocking certain search results from appearing.
Unfortunately, the censorship problem affects many of the private search engines for these two reasons:
An exception to this may be with independent search engines that deploy their own crawlers , such as with Mojeek , or Brave Search . Additionally, with Searx , you can select which engines it uses.
So let’s examine some alternative private search engines you can start using today.
Finding the best private search engine for your needs is a subjective process. Your circumstances and goals are unique, meaning there’s no one-size-fits-all. Things to consider include:
In a perfect world, a search engine would give you great results while also respecting your privacy. Unfortunately, this isn’t a perfect world. Any of the private search engines in this guide could be the best solution for you. But you will need to test drive the ones that look the best to you to see which is really the best fit. Before we start, there is one issue you need to be aware of:
Metasearch vs search : Most private search engines are technically metasearch engines . While a search engine crawls the internet and gathers its own results, a metasearch engine pulls its search results from other search engines, such as Google, Bing, and Yandex.
There are also a few search engines that fall in the middle by deploying their own crawler, but also pulling results from other search engines.
Note : This list is not necessarily in rank order. Choose the best search engine for you based on your own unique needs and threat model.
Here are the best private search engines:
Jurisdiction : Not applicable ( open source , not based in any one location)
Search results : Fully customizable! You can choose from a large selection of engines to display results.
Searx is an open source metasearch engine that gathers results from other search engines while simultaneously respecting your privacy. Even better, you control which search engines Searx pulls results from, as well as specifying the categories for search results.
Searx customizability comes in handy since Google has been known to block Searx requests. We haven’t seen a good solution to the problem, but you can avoid these kinds of problems by telling Searx to avoid Google (or any other source that causes problems).
Searx also allows you to run your own instance of the search engine. The drawback with your own instance, however, is that your search results won’t be mixed with other users. Searx is open source and available on GitHub .
Because Searx is open source and freely available for anyone to use, there are a number of different public instances you can utilize. However, just like with Tor nodes , anyone with bad intentions can set up a “rogue” instance and potentially log user activity, as Searx explains here :
What are the consequences of using public instances?
If someone uses a public instance, he/she has to trust the administrator of that instance. This means that the user of the public instance does not know whether his/her requests are logged, aggregated and sent or sold to a third party.
Unfortunately the Searx project does not run an official public instance. They do recommend public instances that are operated by various individuals or entities. But how do you know those instances aren’t logging your search results on their server? You don’t!
For all we know, a public instance might run by an advertising company, or perhaps a domestic or foreign intel agencies, or just some creeps looking to spy on your data. The only way to be sure is to run your own instance.
Search Results : In our tests, most Megater search results came from Bing , followed by Scopia and Infotiger , another start-up search engine based in Germany. It also displays some results from Yandex and Yahoo.
MetaGer is an open source metasearch engine based in Germany. It gets search results from Bing, Yandex, Yahoo and others, as well as having its own web crawler. This interesting project started in 1996. It is now operated by a non-profit foundation in Germany called SUMA-EV (Association for Free Access to Knowledge). I tested MetaGer for this guide and found the results to be decent, with some nice features as well:
MetaGer does a good job of protecting your privacy, as they explain here . MetaGer converts search requests into anonymous queries through a proxy server, which also provides the “open anonymously” viewing option with all results. The service truncates your IP addresses to protect your privacy, although they do pass along user agent info to their search partners. MetaGer does not utilize cookies or any other tracking methods.
For operation stability and security, MetaGer does keep some logs on their own servers, but this data is kept no longer than 96 hours and is automatically erased. MetaGer finances operations from user donations, as well as ads that are served through partner networks, such as Bing. These ads appear at the top of the search results. However, you can get completely ad-free search results by signing up for an MetaGer membership. (Without memberships and personal donations, MetaGer states they would not be able to continue operations.)
MetaGer runs all of its infrastructure on servers in Germany, which is a good privacy jurisdiction with strict data protection laws. The service is completely open source . For those on the Tor network, MetaGer also hosts a .onion site .
You can read more about using MetaGer, as well as their apps, plugins, and features, on their website . We’ll close here with an interesting quote from MetaGer’s website (translated from German):
Did you know that according to the Patriot Act, all internet servers and search engines physically located in the jurisdiction of the United States are obligated to disclose any information to the intelligence services? Your personal data is at risk even if the servers and search engines don’t store any information: it is sufficient if the intelligence agencies read and store everything at the internet point of connection. All MetaGer servers are located in Germany.
Search results : Mojeek uses its own crawler and is not dependent on others!
Unlike some of the other private (meta)search engines, Mojeek is true search engine with its own crawler . According to the Mojeek blog, the service surpassed 4 billion pages indexed in 2021. If you want complete search independence from the corp
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