Imagine this scenario: you’re worried you may have committed a crime, so you turn to a trusted advisor — OpenAI’s blockbuster ChatGPT, say — to describe what you did and get its advice.
This isn’t remotely far-fetched; lots of people are already getting legal assistance from AI, on everything from divorce proceedings to parking violations. Because people are amazingly stupid, it’s almost certain that people have already asked the bot for advice about enormously consequential questions about, say, murder or drug charges.
According to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, anyone’s who’s done so has made a massive error — because unlike a human lawyer with whom you enjoy sweeping confidentiality protections, ChatGPT conversations can be used against you in court.
Startpage doesn’t track, and you can view result pages via their anonymous proxy. Use that with tor or a VPN and you’re set. YouTube doesn’t like startpages anon proxy though.
Duckduckgo doesn’t track either, and you can view youtube videos in ddg’s site.
https://www.startpage.com/en/privacy-policy
https://duckduckgo.com/privacy
They can still use the data you send over the internet to convict you. I don’t assume that DDG uses encrypted connections.
In other words, they can get the info from your ISP or other forms of surveillance instead.
99.9% of today’s internet is encrypted by default - https.
DDG definitely does. (Though you want to change the settings on the site from GET to POST for privacy)
The current tls standards in Https/3 /quic is especially resilient for standard encrypted web connections.
So, what you do on a site can’t be seen by anyone other than you and the site.
What a site collects is what you allow them to have. And trusting (or not) to believe their policies.
If you use encrypted DNS (doh, dot, dnscrypt, etc.) your ISP can’t see what you’re looking up. If you use encrypted AND oblivious doh, or anonymized dnscrypt, nobody can tell what sites your DNS is looking for and the DNS resolver itself can’t tell where the request you make comes from.
Ech/esni is the newest standard for DNS where nobody can even tell what sites you are making a secure connection to. (The IP can be seen, but not the domain).
With that, using a half decent secops and basic isolation of accounts, profiles, use cases, and housekeeping, and a VPN/proxy/tunnel, your internet use / history isn’t difficult to manage to keep private.
If I’m coming from a different IP, and a different browser (or the exact same as a million others - tor, mullvad) on a different profile, in a container/isolation/vm, with a different fingerprint, via a different DNS, spoofed device identifiers, and privacy scripts/blockers, etc, the likelihood of my use being tracked and used is exceptionally limited.
A browser for porn A browser for local A browser for social A browser for porn