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Duck Tales: DuckDuckGo browser updates — custom themes and password manager (Ep.24)

Duck Tales: DuckDuckGo browser updates — custom themes and password manager (Ep.24)

Published 3 months, 2 weeks ago
Description

In this episode, Peter (Product), Stephen (Design) and Balint (Windows) discuss updates to our browsers, from the most popular custom themes, to why over 40% of our iOS users have made DuckDuckGo their system-wide password manager.

Disclaimers: (1) The audio, video (above), and transcript (below) are unedited and may contain minor inaccuracies or transcription errors. (2) This website is operated by Substack. This is their privacy policy.

Peter: Hi, and welcome to DuckTales, where we go behind the scenes at DuckDuckGo and discuss the stories, the technology, and the people that help build privacy tools for everyone. In each episode, you’ll hear from DuckDuckGo employees about our vision, product updates, engineering, and more recently, approaches to AI as well. My name is Peter. I am on the product team at DuckDuckGo, often working on our browsers, which we’ll talk about today. And joined here today, I have my colleague Stephen.

Stephen: Steven, work on the product design team.

Peter: And Balint.

Balint: Hey, I’m on the Windows Developer Team.

Peter: Awesome, and today we’re going to talk a little bit about our browsers, as I mentioned. So many people don’t know we have browsers. They’ve come to know us through DuckDuckGo Private Search, which of course you can use in any browser. But we’ve for many years offered browsers on iOS and Android devices. And more recently, in the last few years, we’ve expanded that to Windows and Mac desktop computers as well. Our browsers are amongst the most popular in the market. For example, in the United States on iPhones, we are the most popular browser after Safari, which comes built in, and the Chrome browser, which of course many people have come to know over the years. So our browsers are used by lots of different people. When we started building our browsers and as we expanded our browsers to desktop computers, we started to prioritize the features and functionality in our browsers based on sort of two things. One, having privacy at their core. Of course, that’s our brand promise, and we want to deliver on that. But also, we wanted to make sure our browsers were easy to use replacements for the privacy invasive browsers that people have been using for many years. And so we prioritize a lot of features based on what would make it easier to use. We base it on people’s feedback, which we’ll talk about a little bit more. And often internally, we talk about focusing the features we build on the three Ds. We call that dependability, discoverability, and delight. The features should just work. It should be easy to find. And they should be delightful if we’re doing them right. So today, we’re going to talk about a couple different browser capabilities that fall into a few of these buckets that we thought would be interesting to share a little bit about. First, we’ll talk about custom theming. Stephen, do you want to tell us a little bit about that?

Stephen: Yeah, custom theming to me is pretty simple. It’s where you can go into your browser and just choose which color you want to use. It can be that green or blue or purple. I think we have a range of colors to pick from.

Peter: And why did we build custom theming?

Stephen: Originally, we didn’t plan to. We were going to try to keep it simple and just have a light and a

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