Hi all,
there seems to be no appropriate group, so, sorry for this slightly off- topic question.
Just encountered the following problem:
I was connected via VPN and got a DNS assigned. This one is unreliable,
and so, at least one name-lookup went wrong.
Firefox (60.9.0) took the whole URL which I entered into the URL field
and started a google search with it.
Next, google proudly presented their "search hit" (great: an existing URL was found...) but I suspect, that google may store this search hit and present it to everyone searching for the key words there. The annoying
thing is, that this URL is not public and I do not want google to have it.
I already searched through the preferences in firefox, but I cannot see
any setting that prevents firefox from using the URL entered into the URL field for searching with google, if the DNS-lookup fails again.
Maybe one names this paranoid, but I'd appreciate finding a way to
prevent firefox from beaving like this.
Any idea? -- Thanks a lot!
Best regards,
Markus
Hi all,
there seems to be no appropriate group, so, sorry for this slightly off- topic question.
Just encountered the following problem:
I was connected via VPN and got a DNS assigned. This one is unreliable,
and so, at least one name-lookup went wrong.
Firefox (60.9.0) took the whole URL which I entered into the URL field
and started a google search with it.
Next, google proudly presented their "search hit" (great: an existing URL
was found...) but I suspect, that google may store this search hit and present it to everyone searching for the key words there. The annoying
thing is, that this URL is not public and I do not want google to have it.
I already searched through the preferences in firefox, but I cannot see
any setting that prevents firefox from using the URL entered into the URL field for searching with google, if the DNS-lookup fails again.
Maybe one names this paranoid, but I'd appreciate finding a way to
prevent firefox from beaving like this.
Any idea? -- Thanks a lot!
Best regards,
Markus
There are ways to make Google 'forget' previous searches but it's better
to avoid them in the first place by setting DuckDuckGo as the preferred search engine.
Hi all,
there seems to be no appropriate group, so, sorry for this slightly off- topic question.
Just encountered the following problem:
I was connected via VPN and got a DNS assigned. This one is unreliable,
and so, at least one name-lookup went wrong.
Firefox (60.9.0) took the whole URL which I entered into the URL field
and started a google search with it.
Next, google proudly presented their "search hit" (great: an existing URL
was found...) but I suspect, that google may store this search hit and present it to everyone searching for the key words there. The annoying
thing is, that this URL is not public and I do not want google to have it.
I already searched through the preferences in firefox, but I cannot see
any setting that prevents firefox from using the URL entered into the URL field for searching with google, if the DNS-lookup fails again.
Maybe one names this paranoid, but I'd appreciate finding a way to
prevent firefox from beaving like this.
Any idea? -- Thanks a lot!
Best regards,
Markus
On 21/09/2020 12:34, Markus Robert Kessler wrote:
Hi all,
there seems to be no appropriate group, so, sorry for this slightly
off- topic question.
Just encountered the following problem:
I was connected via VPN and got a DNS assigned. This one is unreliable,
and so, at least one name-lookup went wrong.
Firefox (60.9.0) took the whole URL which I entered into the URL field
and started a google search with it.
Next, google proudly presented their "search hit" (great: an existing
URL was found...) but I suspect, that google may store this search hit
and present it to everyone searching for the key words there. The
annoying thing is, that this URL is not public and I do not want google
to have it.
I already searched through the preferences in firefox, but I cannot see
any setting that prevents firefox from using the URL entered into the
URL field for searching with google, if the DNS-lookup fails again.
Maybe one names this paranoid, but I'd appreciate finding a way to
prevent firefox from beaving like this.
Any idea? -- Thanks a lot!
Best regards,
Markus
Seems I don't understand what you're trying to prevent If you do not
want google accessing your address, have a look (not google, try
DuckDuck) for robots.txt usage If you dont want anyone or specific
addresses accessing your address, use hosts.allow and/or hosts.deny What access (telnet, ssh, http, ping) are you trying to avoid?
When you say "this URL is not public" do you mean e.g. 10.x.x.x or 192.168.x.x, or that you just don't want it known?
Am Mon, 21 Sep 2020 15:53:05 +0300 schrieb Henry Crun:
On 21/09/2020 12:34, Markus Robert Kessler wrote:
Hi all,
there seems to be no appropriate group, so, sorry for this slightly
off- topic question.
Just encountered the following problem:
I was connected via VPN and got a DNS assigned. This one is unreliable,
and so, at least one name-lookup went wrong.
Firefox (60.9.0) took the whole URL which I entered into the URL field
and started a google search with it.
Next, google proudly presented their "search hit" (great: an existing
URL was found...) but I suspect, that google may store this search hit
and present it to everyone searching for the key words there. The
annoying thing is, that this URL is not public and I do not want google
to have it.
I already searched through the preferences in firefox, but I cannot see
any setting that prevents firefox from using the URL entered into the
URL field for searching with google, if the DNS-lookup fails again.
Maybe one names this paranoid, but I'd appreciate finding a way to
prevent firefox from beaving like this.
Any idea? -- Thanks a lot!
Best regards,
Markus
Seems I don't understand what you're trying to prevent If you do not
want google accessing your address, have a look (not google, try
DuckDuck) for robots.txt usage If you dont want anyone or specific
addresses accessing your address, use hosts.allow and/or hosts.deny What
access (telnet, ssh, http, ping) are you trying to avoid?
When you say "this URL is not public" do you mean e.g. 10.x.x.x or
192.168.x.x, or that you just don't want it known?
Hi,
let's assume you're loading the following URL into your firefox:
https://www.yourhealthassurance.com/diseases/John.Smith/ProstateCA.htm
Then only a DNS lookup is made and the whole URL, path and file, will be transmitted in an encrypted way.
If the DNS-lookup fails, then firefox will use the same URL you provided
and start a google search. Without prior warning, nor asking you.
If the URL exists, then google remebers it and everyone "googling" for
John Smith's diseases may find what he suffers from.
That's what is so annoying.
Best regards,
Markus
On Mon, 21 Sep 2020 13:02:09 +0200, Dirk T. Verbeek wrote:
There are ways to make Google 'forget' previous searches but it's better
to avoid them in the first place by setting DuckDuckGo as the preferred
search engine.
I thought I saw somewhere that google bought DuckDuckGo.
On 9/21/20 8:43 AM, Bit Twister wrote:
On Mon, 21 Sep 2020 13:02:09 +0200, Dirk T. Verbeek wrote:From https://www.majorgeeks.com/content/page/what_is_duckduckgo.html
There are ways to make Google 'forget' previous searches but it's better >>> to avoid them in the first place by setting DuckDuckGo as the preferred
search engine.
I thought I saw somewhere that google bought DuckDuckGo.
"Some people believe DuckDuckGo is owned by Google. We assume that was because Google either sold or transferred Duck.com to DuckDuckGo in 2018
and allowed DuckDuckGo as a search option in Google Chrome. No one knows
(or isn't saying) why Google did this although we can assume to avoid lawsuits over the name. Google was forwarding duck.com (acquired years earlier) to Google search. We assume that all of this was done to avoid possible monopoly lawsuits in the future, but we're just armchair geeks."
TJ
On 2020-09-21, Markus Robert Kessler <dimke.fax@uni.de> wrote:
Am Mon, 21 Sep 2020 15:53:05 +0300 schrieb Henry Crun:
On 21/09/2020 12:34, Markus Robert Kessler wrote:
Hi all,
there seems to be no appropriate group, so, sorry for this slightly
off- topic question.
Just encountered the following problem:
I was connected via VPN and got a DNS assigned. This one is
unreliable,
and so, at least one name-lookup went wrong.
Firefox (60.9.0) took the whole URL which I entered into the URL
field and started a google search with it.
Next, google proudly presented their "search hit" (great: an existing
URL was found...) but I suspect, that google may store this search
hit and present it to everyone searching for the key words there. The
annoying thing is, that this URL is not public and I do not want
google to have it.
I already searched through the preferences in firefox, but I cannot
see any setting that prevents firefox from using the URL entered into
the URL field for searching with google, if the DNS-lookup fails
again.
Maybe one names this paranoid, but I'd appreciate finding a way to
prevent firefox from beaving like this.
Any idea? -- Thanks a lot!
Best regards,
Markus
Seems I don't understand what you're trying to prevent If you do not
want google accessing your address, have a look (not google, try
DuckDuck) for robots.txt usage If you dont want anyone or specific
addresses accessing your address, use hosts.allow and/or hosts.deny
What access (telnet, ssh, http, ping) are you trying to avoid?
When you say "this URL is not public" do you mean e.g. 10.x.x.x or
192.168.x.x, or that you just don't want it known?
Hi,
let's assume you're loading the following URL into your firefox:
https://www.yourhealthassurance.com/diseases/John.Smith/ProstateCA.htm
Then only a DNS lookup is made and the whole URL, path and file, will
be transmitted in an encrypted way.
If the DNS-lookup fails, then firefox will use the same URL you
provided and start a google search. Without prior warning, nor asking
you.
If the URL exists, then google remebers it and everyone "googling" for
John Smith's diseases may find what he suffers from.
That's what is so annoying.
This was a result of google's (in Chrome) unifying the address box with
the search box. Everyone else eventually jumped on the boat since users wanted it. It used to be that they were two separate boxes. If it cannot
find an IP address for the entry, it assumes this is a search item and searches for it instead. This was done as a favour to the user,
so they would not have to juggle to different entries depending on
search or on address.
I have no idea what you mean. It does not AFAIK, remember the address as
a search term. You seem to be being annoyed by a straw man. Do you have
any evidence that google behaves as you imagine it does?
https://spreadprivacy.com/what-does-google-know-about-me/
Perhaps you would check and comment on the above. Presumably there is evidence supporting allegations made.
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