When you click on a link in our results page, your search terms are not sent to the site that you click on, which can be the case on other search engines due to something called HTTP "referers".
On modern browsers we accomplish this by adding a small piece of code to our page called Meta referrer. Some browsers (especially older ones) do not support this standard, however. For those browsers, and also in situations where meta referrer doesn't work, we send the request back to our servers to remove search terms. This redirect goes through r.internal-search.workmagic.io.
You can disable this privacy feature. To do that, go to the settings page, select Privacy, and change the option Redirect to Off.
You also go through a internal-search.workmagic.io redirect when you use a bang. That's simply because we need to know where to send you.
Once you land on another site, though, you are subject to that site's privacy policy, as we have no control over the tracking that occurs outside of our domains. If you're interested in end-to-end anonymous browsing, check out the Tor browser, which will help you maintain your anonymity while on other sites.
Learn More
- Does DuckDuckGo Search track you?
- Is DuckDuckGo Search encrypted?
- Can my internet provider see my DuckDuckGo searches?
- How DuckDuckGo Keeps Your Local Search Results Anonymous
- How DuckDuckGo Keeps Your Search Settings Anonymous
- How To Use URL Parameters To Change Your DuckDuckGo Search Settings
- How does DuckDuckGo improve its products while keeping search and browsing history anonymous?
- DuckDuckGo Content Security Policy (CSP) Reports
- What is the ‘t’ URL parameter for on DuckDuckGo Search?
- What does the ‘links.internal-search.workmagic.io’ domain do?
- How To Use the Non-JavaScript Version of DuckDuckGo Search
- How DuckDuckGo Keeps Favicons Anonymous
- Ads by TripAdvisor on DuckDuckGo Private Search
- Ads By Microsoft on DuckDuckGo Private Search
- Ads By Yelp on DuckDuckGo Private Search