DuckDuckGo has other ideas for Google’s EU search choice screen

The changes include more search engine options and an introductory screen aimed at reducing bias.

Chat with SearchBot

Even though it’s one of the options, DuckDuckGo is not happy with Google’s proposed search choice screen for Android users in the EU and has released a proposal of its own. It boils down to giving users more search engine choices and more details about the selection process.

Duckduckgo Preference Menu Proposal11
DuckDuckGo’s proposed search engine selection screen also includes an introduction screen to provide users with more information regarding their decision. Source: DuckDuckGo.

The introductory screen. Google’s proposed design combines details and choices on one screen (as seen above). DuckDuckGo’s proposed initial screen informs users that they can change their default search engine later. DuckDuckGo’s version also tells users that “search engines vary in how they present results, match your values, and collect your data.”

The term “search provider,” in Google’s version, is replaced with the term “search engine” in DuckDuckGo’s version because consumers more readily understand that phrasing, the company said. To reduce subconscious bias, DuckDuckGo’s proposed version also prompts users to “select a search engine,” as opposed to Google’s phrasing, “choose your search provider.”

More search engine choices. Google’s proposed screen presents users with four search engine options (including Google itself). The three competitors that will appear were determined in an auction. “We believe Google’s search preference menu for the European Union is designed in a way that undercuts the very reason it was created,” DuckDuckGo’s proposal reads, “This restriction is surely tied to the underlying pay-to-play auction model for these artificially-limited slots.”

In all EU territories, DuckDuckGo and Info.com will appear as options alongside Google.

Preference Menu Proposal Annotation A9
Source: DuckDuckGo.

DuckDuckGo’s proposal adds a scrollable screen with larger logos and a brief description of each option (without a drop-down menu). The company cites Microsoft’s 2010 web browser choice screen as a precedent for its proposed introduction and scrollable choice screens.

In its own testing, DuckDuckGo asked users, “Which version of this search preference menu would make you more inclined to pick a search engine other than Google?” One-third of respondents chose Google’s version and two-thirds selected DuckDuckGo’s proposed screen, according to the company.

Why we care. Google’s limited search engine options for users, along with the auction determining which competitors appear, has raised concerns over whether the solution addresses the app preference issues raised in the 2018 Android antitrust ruling.

DuckDuckGo and Ecosia, a search engine that uses part of its profits for reforestation efforts, have both been pubically critical of Google’s methodology. If they, or other prominent entities, are able to draw more attention to the issue, Google may be pressured into adjusting its process, which could lead to more Android users selecting a default search engine that isn’t Google.


Contributing authors are invited to create content for Search Engine Land and are chosen for their expertise and contribution to the search community. Our contributors work under the oversight of the editorial staff and contributions are checked for quality and relevance to our readers. The opinions they express are their own.


About the author

George Nguyen
Contributor
George Nguyen is the Director of SEO Editorial at Wix, where he manages the Wix SEO Learning Hub. His career is focused on disseminating best practices and reducing misinformation in search. George formerly served as an editor for Search Engine Land, covering organic and paid search.

Get the newsletter search marketers rely on.