Jared Newman* says if a stripped-down, more private version of Google Search existed, it might look a lot like Startpage.
Picture for a moment a version of Google Search that has barely evolved from its early years.
Instead of a results page cluttered by informational widgets, this one would primarily link to other sites.
And instead of tracking your search history for ad targeting purposes, this search engine would be decidedly impersonal.
It turns out that such a thing exists in Startpage, a Netherlands-based Google alternative that emphasises privacy.
While it’s not the only privacy-first search engine, Startpage is the only one whose search results come from Google, due to a unique and longstanding agreement in which Startpage pays the search giant to get a feed of links for any search.
The result is a search engine that feels a lot like Google did before it leaned into personalised search and advertising – and all of its requisite data collection.
“We don’t collect, share, or save any personal information,” says Startpage’s CEO Robert Beens.
“That means not setting cookies.”
“It means not storing IP addresses.”
“We don’t store your searches, and we don’t profile you.”
Although StartPage has been around since 2006, it’s made several major improvements lately as people become more wary of data collection by tech giants.
It launched an ‘Anonymous View’ feature that hides your device’s identity from the sites you click on.
Earlier this month, Startpage added another big feature: it’s an answer to Google News in the form of a ‘News’ tab, which provides a feed of stories based on your search results.
Beens says the News tab is a response, of sorts, to the way personalised newsfeeds can predominantly surface ideas people agree with, thereby reinforcing their existing biases.
Because Startpage isn’t collecting any data on users, its story selection – which comes from Microsoft’s Bing search engine instead of Google – is inherently more neutral.
Google without the Googliness
Startpage wasn’t always focused on privacy.
When it launched under the name Ixquick in 1998 – the same year as Google – its goal was to provide a ‘meta’ search engine that would combine results from various other contemporary search tools.
It was an interesting ide but became less necessary as search engines like Google started to feel all-encompassing.
Ixquick survived the rise of Google, and in 2005, Beens says he had a privacy epiphany after examining the legal risks of collecting users’ search data.
“If you have a constant stream of searches, and you’re able to connect that to one particular person … you get an insight into people’s lives that is really shocking,” he says.
Shortly after this revelation, Ixquick began pivoting to privacy.
It stopped storing users’ search data in 2006, and it stopped logging IP addresses in 2009.
It also made an unusual deal with Google, giving it access to Google search results under the condition they not be combined with results from any other source, like the existing meta-search engine was doing.
Beens won’t get into specifics on Startpage’s deal with Google but says it came about partly because of “personal contacts” at the company, and partly because Google “appreciated the option for consumers” who wanted more privacy.
In any case, this arrangement has since become unique among search engines.
Beens says the companies have renewed their agreement every two to three years since 2006, and he’s not particularly worried that will change, especially as Google faces more scrutiny from regulators in Europe, where Startpage is based.
“I can’t say there’s no risk, because you don’t say that in life,” Beens says.
“But as far as we know, they’re happy with the partnership, and they feel that we really offer something special to our audience, to people who are looking for a privacy search engine.”
The ups and downs of a Google alternative
There is a catch to all of this: Although Startpage is technically getting its search results from Google, those results aren’t quite as good as the ones that appear on Google proper.
I’ve noticed, for instance, that Startpage doesn’t always get equal results from social media sites such as LinkedIn and Twitter, and if I search for a name in quotes along with a search term, Startpage can have far fewer results than Google does.
Startpage also struggles with site-specific searches, so if I enter ‘site: fastcompany.com’ along with some keywords to find one of my previous stories, it’s less likely to come up compared to the same search on Google.
Beens says he’s asked Google about these kinds of discrepancies in the past but has never received a clear answer.
“We don’t know what the strategy is on Google’s side with the slight differences that you noticed,” he says.
“We do feel it’s a great feed, and we feel it’s better than any other feed.”
The other issue is the primitive nature of Startpage’s results page, which largely sticks to the ‘10 blue links’ approach that search engines have been moving away from for years.
While Google’s attempts to provide instant answers to certain queries can be heavy-handed – and, in some cases, problematic for publishers – Startpage swings too far in the other direction.
It occasionally provides a little answer box next to its search results with an excerpt from Wikipedia, but that’s about it.
This is the area that Startpage seems most interested in improving, which helps explain why the company recently took on a significant outside investment from an advertising company called System1.
Some privacy advocates have criticised this, noting that System1 is in the behavioural ad targeting business.
In response, Beens says that System1 is merely trying to enact its own kind of privacy pivot, forming a subsidiary called PrivacyOne after witnessing the change in people’s attitudes about data collection.
He also says Startpage has provisions in its agreement with System1 to ensure that the founders get to make all privacy-related decisions.
The resulting search engine may never be exactly like Google.
But with a few more tabs and information panels for things like news, maps, and weather, maybe it’ll get close enough.
* Jared Newman covers apps and technology for Fast Company and writes two newsletters – Cord Cutter Weekly and Advisorator.
This article first appeared at www.fastcompany.com