I’ve been using duckduckgo for years ever since I degoogled but I’m increasingly annoyed by its complete lack of IPv6 connectivity. I use NAT64 and so it works fine but it bothers me to use services that don’t have v6. Does someone have a good non-google IPv6 search engine that’s privacy respecting?

  • @SportsRulesOpinions
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    41 year ago

    I have no idea what’s IPv6 but I use Ecosia, which uses Bing but protects your privacy and plants trees. I sure hope it has IPv6.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      1 year ago

      🤔 it does indeed have v6, through cloudflare but such is half the internet lol. Might give it a try

      EDIT: Just the fact that searching IP address doesn’t show me a v4 address unlike ddg makes me warm and fuzzy, will definitely give this a run lol.

  • PHLAK
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    11 year ago

    I’m sorry, but why does the IP protocol used have anything to do with them as a service. It sounds to me like you like DDG. To be honest lack of IPv6 support is a petty reason not to use them (or any service for that matter).

    • @[email protected]OP
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      21 year ago

      My network is entirely v6, I tolerate NAT64 given the current internet landscape but every service I can cut out that needs NAT64 the closer I can get to disabling NAT64 which is ultimately my goal. Still a long way from that but I’d like to get there. Additionally the NAT adds latency as it resides outside of my normal network path. I’ve also taken up a policy of not using new services that don’t have v6 if at all possible. That was a key factor in deciding what lemmy instance to use. While it might not matter to you it’s something I look at.

    • @orangeboats
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      21 year ago

      To be honest lack of IPv6 support is a petty reason not to use them

      For people like us (IPv6 advocates), moving away from IPv4-only services is just like voting with our wallet. Well, except that the flow we are looking at is not money flow, but internet traffic instead.

      Obviously such a movement is not going to make a huge dent in the grand scheme of things – very few people care about the internet protocol they are using. But the idea is that it will eventually end up in someone’s log that, a lack of IPv6 support is driving customers away and/or implementation of IPv6 support is attracting new customers.

      Also, it doesn’t hurt anyone else except us when we purposefully move away from IPv4-only services even though the IPv6-capable services are worse ;) Anecdotally speaking though, that’s a rare case.