DuckDuckGo uses artificial intelligence technology to provide you with chatGPT-style search results: Learn more
DuckDuckGo also collects artificial intelligence to provide its users with search results similar to ChatGPT. The search engine follows Microsoft and Google to give you results through a chatbot called DuckAssist.
DuckDuckGo (DDG) says it leverages Open AI technology, from ChatGPT itself and Anthropic, an AI startup from former Open AI employees.
Both companies have provided their chatbots to power DDG’s natural language, but it also returns results via Wikipedia, which some of you might be happy with because the platform’s data editing feature skews the results.
DDG users can access the new AI assistant through the app and browser extensions, covering all devices where DDG is available. The beta version is free for everyone and you don’t need to log in to use the assistant.
You only have it in English for now, and in the next few weeks all search users will be able to try DuckAssist. DDG wants to use more sources to build response time and accuracy of results. But it is imperative that the company also focuses on the relevance of the content provided and ensuring that its language does not mislead.
AI chatbots have become the talk of the town, and Microsoft has a clear lead thanks to its $10 billion investment in Open AI for ChatGPT. Bing Search and the Edge browser are the company’s first products to get a chatbot, which has given Bing another chance to become a relevant product in its space.
Microsoft’s AI-powered Bing search engine has crossed the 100 million daily active user mark, as ChatGPT’s integration with Bing has helped the company grow monthly usage more than ever before. Its rival search engine Google has more than a billion daily active users.
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