DuckDuckGo

 

DuckDuckGo is a search engine, one that emphasizes privacy. It was founded by Gabriel Weinberg, a Jew presumably. The Wiki chooses not to enlighten us on the point but it does read as an enthusiastic admirer. The agenda at work again? He has sales of $100 megabucks. Where does that come from? Pass. The Wiki is keeping quiet about that as well. Does he care about Free Speech? No, not when Russians are at it, while they are involved with the Ukraine.

The Times Of Israel Approves Of Gabriel Weinberg. So does Haaretz, also run by Jews for Jews. See Little guy who believes in privacy takes on the giants - Business - Haaretz. But Stormfront does not. It assumes he is a Jew & is likely to be right. See Please don't use DuckDuckGo, owned by (((Gabriel Weinberg))) - Stormfront. NB Jewish Contributions claims, implicitly that he is one of theirs.

https://www.goyimtv.tv/v/1219825354/Jew-Gabriel-Weinberg-Owns-DuckDuckGo directs us to Richard Granville, the founder of Yippy ex Wikipedia does not make the claim. He sold out to DDG.

DuckDuckGo ex Wiki
DuckDuckGo (DDG) is an internet  search engine that emphasizes protecting searchers' privacy and avoiding the filter bubble of personalized search results.[3] DuckDuckGo does not show search results from content farms.[5] It uses various APIs of other websites to show quick results to queries and for traditional links it uses the help of its partners (mainly Bing) and its own crawler.[6][7]

The company is based in Paoli, Pennsylvania, in Greater Philadelphia and had 149 employees as of October 2021.[8] The company name is a reference to the children's game duck, duck, goose.[9][10]

 

Gabriel Weinberg ex Money Inc.
10 Things You Didn’t Know About Gabriel Weinberg

Gabriel Weinberg is an American businessman and entrepreneur who founded the DuckDuck Go company. He’s involved in programs to help people guard their privacy on the internet and he takes that mission seriously. He’s been fortunate in his career aspirations and he stands as a role model for young entrepreneurs who look for guidance in launching their own ideas into lucrative businesses. We can learn a lot from his example, including his successes and the errors he made on his way to the top of his niche in the industry. Here are 10 things you didn’t know about Gabriel Weinberg that might inspire you on your journey.

1.1. Gabriel Weinberg founded DuckDuckGo in 2007

Weinberg has achieved success at an early age. He launched DuckDuckGo in 2007. It’s an internet business that provides users with tools for online privacy to prevent hackers and advertisers from tracking them and obtaining personal information. The company provides a non-tracking alternative to Google search. Users have access to the DuckDuckGo desktop browser extension and a mobile privacy browser for private web browsing without being tracked. The company has been in business for more than 13 years, according to Crunchbase.

2. He started DuckDuckGo in his basement

Gabriel didn’t have a lot of capital to finance his business. He started the company from his basement. It is entirely self-funded. What began as a one-man business has since grown into an operation that employs 50 staff members. The current annual revenue that it brings in is more than $25 million. The company has employees stationed across several continents and has gone international.p>

3. He made time to have a family

Gabriel has been a busy guy. He is the founder as well as the chief executive officer of DuckDuckGo. His role in executive leadership keeps him busy running the multimillion-dollar business, but he has also made time to enjoy a wonderful personal life. Work and money are both essential for success, but he found the balance between work and home life to have success in both areas of his life. He is married. He and his wife have children and they live together at their home in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania

4. DuckDuckGo isn’t his first business

According to Forbes, Weinberg founded another company before DuckDuckGo. In 2000, he launched Learnection which was an educational software company. The goal of the business was to help involve parents more in their children’s education and in schools.

5. His first business failed

 Gabriel learned a lot about business during his first attempt at entrepreneurship. The 2000 company called Learnection was founded with money that his grandmother had left Weinberg. it paid for his college tuition and some of it was leftover to start his new internet business. Weinberg admitted that he made some mistakes in structuring his first business. His first error was hiring friends because they were people he liked. They weren’t suitable for the positions he put them in. Gabriel also had decision-making issues. He was slow to make important decisions and it eventually led to the failure of Learnection.

6. He is a serial entrepreneur

Weinberg continued to move forward after the failure of Learnection. He didn’t let it dampen his spirits or keep him down. He did what he needed to do and that realized he’d made some mistakes. He learned from them so he could avoid repeating them in the future. He got back into the mainstream and continued to establish other companies. He founded NamesDatabase, an early social networking company to help users find old friends and classmates. Weinberg built up the business and then he sold it for $10 million in 2006 to classmates.com..

7. Weinberg is an MIT graduate

Before Gabriel Weinberg started launching new tech startups, he took care of the business of getting an education. This is a foundational step that helps entrepreneurs to have a sense of where to start and how to successfully run a business. It also provides you with the necessary skills needed in your chosen career path. Gabriel earned his bachelor’s degree in physics from MIT in just 3 years, graduating in 2001. He continued on at MIT to earn his master’s degree in 2005, according to LinkedIn. He was also a member of the Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Pi Sigma fraternities.

8. He is a writer

Weinberg co-authored two books. The first was titled “Traction.” The book was released in 2014. It was followed by his second release titled “Super Thinking” released in May of 2018. In both titles, he shares his wisdom about how to get ahead in your chosen career.

9. Gabriel Weinberg believes in using mental models

According to Medium, Weinberg believes in using mental models to understand the dynamics of behavioral economics and how they apply to business and investing. He describes common mistakes and carelessness that can undermine our business plans and how we can choose from the tens of thousands of these mental models and apply them to achieve greater success.

10. Gabriel is a lifelong learner

Gabriel Weinberg’s writing reflects the belief that we need to continue learning if we want to be successful. He hones in on three key areas where we must continue our personal growth. These include choosing from the most appropriate and suitable mental model for our experiences, enrolling in coursework, receiving mentoring from experts, and gaining first-hand experience. Some of these suggestions are included in the book that he co-authored titled “Super Thinking: The Big Book of Mental Models. His participation in the writing of this book was inspired by a 1995 work by Charlie Munger that helped to open up his eyes and his mind to the power of our thoughts and the actions that follow. It led him to conduct his own research and delve further into the possibilities for constructing mental models to fit each situation.

DuckDuckGo, the free speech search engine that never was ex Vox

The Times Of Israel Approves Of Gabriel Weinberg

https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/business/2014-04-06/ty-article/taking-on-google/0000017f-e1e4-df7c-a5ff-e3fe40430000

Little guy who believes in privacy takes on the giants - Business - Haaretz

Please don't use DuckDuckGo, owned by (((Gabriel Weinberg))) - Stormfront

https://jewishcontributions.com/cards/104-gabriel-weinberg/

Jewish Contributions explains our Gabriel.

Yippy ex Wikipedia
Yippy was a metasearch engine that grouped searched results into clusters.[1][2] It was originally developed and released by Vivísimo in 2004 under the name Clusty, before Vivisimo was later acquired by IBM and Yippy was sold in 2010 to a company now called Yippy, Inc. At the time, the website received 100,000 unique visitors a month.

As of August 2019, Yippy's main page states their searches are powered by IBM Watson, asserting it is "the right search" (italics theirs) that "delivers fair search results based on balanced algorithms."[3]

In 2019, Yippy, Inc. CEO Rich Granville presented the search engine as free of censorship of conservative views and called the company an "intelligence enterprise" with high-level White House connections.[4]

As of 2021, the website redirects to DuckDuckGo.