#News

DuckDuckGo’s AI Tools Exit Beta, Bringing Private AI Search to the Masses

DuckDuckGo’s AI Tools Exit Beta, Bringing Private AI Search to the Masses

Date: March 07, 2025

DuckDuckGo rolls out AI-powered search and chatbot features, ensuring privacy-focused users can access AI tools without compromising anonymity.

DuckDuckGo is making a big move in the AI space. The privacy-focused search engine has officially taken its AI tools out of beta, rolling them out for all users. This marks a major step for the company, which has long positioned itself as the go-to alternative for people looking to escape Big Tech’s data-hungry ecosystems.

The newly launched features include AI-generated search summaries and Duck.ai, an anonymous AI chatbot. Both have been designed with privacy in mind—something DuckDuckGo users expect. “We want to kind of stay conservative with it,” said Gabriel Weinberg, DuckDuckGo’s CEO, in an interview with The Verge. “We don’t want to put it in front of people if we don’t think it’s right.”

DuckAssist, which originally launched in 2023, has evolved beyond Wikipedia-based answers. Now, it pulls information from a broader range of sources, offering AI-assisted summaries directly in search results. But there’s a catch—users can turn these features off if they prefer a traditional search experience. Unlike Google’s AI Overviews, which have been met with mixed reactions, DuckDuckGo is giving users more control over how AI interacts with their queries.

In a blog post, they wrote: 

We’re finding that some people prefer to start in chat mode and then jump into more traditional search results when needed, while others prefer the opposite…. So, we thought the best thing to do was offer both. We made it easy to move between them, and we included an off switch for those who’d like to avoid AI altogether.

The bigger addition here is Duck.ai, the company’s AI chatbot. Powered by models from GPT-4o mini, o3-mini, Llama 3.3, Mistral Small 3, and Claude 3 Haiku, the chatbot allows users to have conversational interactions—without tracking or logging their data. Even better, there’s no account required. Recent chats are stored locally on the user’s device, reinforcing DuckDuckGo’s commitment to privacy.

Right now, Duck.ai doesn’t have real-time web search, but that could change soon. The company is already working on bringing live internet results into the chatbot alongside other features like mobile voice interaction and image-based search queries. While Duck.ai is free, there’s talk of a potential premium tier with access to more advanced AI models.

The strategy is clear—DuckDuckGo isn’t trying to replace Google, ChatGPT, or Perplexity outright. Instead, it wants to offer an AI-powered experience that respects user privacy. “We think some queries are better to start with chat, some are better to start with search,” Weinberg told The Verge. Rather than forcing AI on users, DuckDuckGo is betting on choice and transparency.

Users can access the AI chatbot via the DuckDuckGo browser or directly at Duck.ai. With privacy concerns growing around AI, DuckDuckGo’s approach offers a refreshing alternative—one where users don’t have to trade personal data for cutting-edge tech.
 

Arpit Dubey

By Arpit Dubey LinkedIn Icon

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