Welcome, privacy! Gibiru tries to break Google/government alliance
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  1. #1

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    Default Welcome, privacy! Gibiru tries to break Google/government alliance







    If you don’t want your online activity picked apart and plucked by Internet entities and the government alike, the Web doesn’t offer all too many options. The developers at Gibiru are trying to change all of that.

    While work-arounds and hacks can keep would-be spies from snooping on the Internet activity of others, novices aren’t left with many viable means of achieving anonymity on the Web. To remedy that, the Gibiru search engine exists to allow surfers to query anything — questionable or not — without risking the repercussions of having their privacy practically eliminated by Silicon Valley companies that are coming creepily close to being the Big Brother of the Web.

    With the US House of Representatives recently passing the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, or CISPA, Congress is close to being in cahoots — officially — with the Internet’s biggest service providers. Should the legislation leave Capitol Hill and head to the White House, a veto from President Barack Obama is the only thing that will keep the federal government from going into the online activity of every American with seemingly no questions asked.

    Even without CISPA being brought to Obama’s Oval Office desk just yet, Web surfers regularly submit activity logs over the Internet without even realizing it. Gibiru, however, has gone out of the way to make sure that that isn’t the case.
    "Gibiru is what Google started out as over 10 years ago, the good old days," Steve Marshall, founder and CEO of Gibiru, explains in a press release.

    On the website, the company explains the framework for its formula: “Gibiru provides the basic Google results most people are familiar with and love but when you search the web through Gibiru, the system does not use your IP address or cookie data when it returns the search results, providing you with a non personal private search experience.”
    Gibiru operates like Google, essentially, by eliminating the key components that put personal privacy at risk when surfing through the more well-known search engine. On their website, Gibiru is explained as a way to conduct web searches that are both uncensored and under wraps. That is, by modifying Google’s search algorithm, Gibiru not only eliminates the cookie trackers that Google installs on its users’ computers, but also allows for customers to conduct queries without being subjected to the “personalization” that Google insists on.

    "If I am searching for something, it could just be that I don’t know what or where it is, so, why would you personalize my results? Just let me search in peace,” Marshall pleads.

    Earlier this year, Gibiru reached a major milestone — as of February 2, the search engine was experiencing an average of 10,000 queries each day. Explaining the news, however, its developers were unable to offer any more details — that’s because they keep very limited track of what goes on with its users.

    Instead Gibiru offers an alternative to searching, but it doesn’t stop just there. Also on their site, the webmasters make a point of introducing their customers to articles on current events that might not make the cut when it comes to Google’s own news service.
    “Recently, the NSA has had major publishers remove Alternative News sites from search results,” reads one page on the Gibiru website. “Unfortunately, the government , major publishers and search engines are [forced] to work closely to chill Internet discourse. America Online, Microsoft, Yahoo and others are slowly turning the Internet into an information superhighway dominated by barricades, toll booths, off-ramps that lead to dead ends and track you everywhere. This censorship is accomplished by geo-location filtering: the restriction or modifying of Web content based on the geographical region of the user. In addition to countries, such filtering can now be implemented for states, cities, and even individual IP addresses.”

    Speaking of why he went ahead with the development of Gibiru, Marshall makes his case by condemning the competition. "I simply got tired of seeing only what Google thought I wanted to see, and it continues to get worse,"he says. "What’s more, is that Google is capitalizing on its patron's privacy rights by compiling their search behavior via cookies and selling it off to advertisers and government entities for profiling.”

    “It is a form of military-grade marketing and that is just how the cookies crumble,” Marshall adds.

    Originally posted on RT.com on


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  3. #2

    Join Date
    Mar 2012
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    Pretty cool, I'll definitely give it a try thanks :)

  4. #3

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    Feb 2012
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    Nice, thanks for the sharing info, i never hear about this before.

  5. #4

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    Feb 2012
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    I've been using this for a few days now. seems like good old google to me =)

  6. #5

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    wow. very nice. im on my to Gibiru. thank you

  7. #6

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    Censorship of the internet must stop. It must, freedom and money rarely mix well.

    Thanks Night_Crawler, Gibiru will be my default search engine for sure.

    ---------- Post added at 02:42 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:50 PM ----------

    Hey Night_Crawler,

    Not to be a cynic, but there seems to be a lot of text-ads, "Ads by Google" on the search results, are we sure these results are anonymous and not just a Google Custom Search? I was wondering if you knew anymore information about Gibiru, or the people behind it.

    Idk what the site is doing, just a proxy search on-top of Google, runned by Joomla? I'm sure there's much more to it than that... as long as it gets the job done I guess.

    How does this compare to alternative search engine like DuckDuckGo?

    The NSA getting in the way of freedom of information is disheartening... big money, +NSA, +Government, +Media Companies, +ISPs +Google/Microsoft - Big Tech in cahoots is a scary notion...
    Last edited by anonob; May 13th, 2012 at 06:44 PM.

  8. #7

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    Thanks for posting this - I may make it my new default search engine. I don't think the average computer user realizes the extent to which their privacy is broken, and won't .. until something bad happens because of it. This site helps, for sure.

  9. #8

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    May 2012
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    Hey there, thanks for showing us this but i do have a question for you mate. How would one know if a search engine is anonymous or not? i mean a point anonob made about the ads and such made me think also if it is just a customised search engine to make it seem like your searches are anonymous but are actually being tracked.

  10. #9

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    yeh, if it isn't Anonymous searching, it'll just be an easy way to make $$ for them :)

  11. #10

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    May 2012
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    Default Answers to your questions

    Quote Originally Posted by anonob View Post
    yeh, if it isn't Anonymous searching, it'll just be an easy way to make $$ for them :)
    Response form Gibiru:

    I created Gibiru in response to Google pulling my news site coupmedia.org out of its news Index, essentially censoring our news as well as many other "alternative news" websites form Google users. Additionally, we decided that what google was doing with all of the data on user queries was inappropriate, thus decided to mask the IP field through an anon proxy. instance. Google ads still pass through the API because we dont want to extract, modify or censor anything as we are pulling the complete Google API. The ad revenue does support Gibiru operational costs as well as the cost of Coupmedia.org, but is certainly not making anyone here rich.

    That being said, Gibiru is not some CIA front, or trick, Gibiru is a legitimate response to internet privacy issues we face today, having been been on the front line.
    This should be quite clear, provided the nature of our content and our good reputation among the alternative news community.

    However, you should be aware that the Gibiru Privacy policy (Privacy Policy) clearly states that sites you visit after your search might still place tracking code on your computer, so it is best to use the cookie crumbler which can be downloaded from Gibiru at least once a day to clear off any cookies that might get set on your local system. Cookie Crumbler

    I hope this helps answer all of your questions as to the Gibiru Uncensored Anon search project. We will be releasing an HTTPS release as well in the next few weeks, we are also working on a pier based version so stay tuned for additional Anon security updates.

    We hope you continue to support our quest for a free uncensored Internet.

    Cheers,

    Steven Marshall
    Founder Gibiru

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