Skip to main content

Would you trust Verizon’s new privacy-focused OneSearch to protect your data?

OneSearch
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Verizon is looking to put some major security breaches behind it with a brand-new, privacy-focused platform called OneSearch. Built on a model that involves encrypting search terms, leaving results unfiltered, and not storing or transferring of any user information whatsoever, it’s going after the privacy-conscious web users of the world.

In 2020, the search engine market is both hotly competitive and not even remotely so. Google controls almost 93% of all searches, with Bing, Yahoo, Baidu, Yandex, and everyone else battling it out for scant shares of the remainder. Some of those, like DuckDuckGo, Qwant, and StartPage, hope to attract an audience by putting privacy first. They don’t track users, don’t sell their data, and don’t filter search results. Those are all features of Verizon’s new OneSearch platform as well, but it’s hoping that its polished product, and a few more features, will be enough to draw the privacy conscious away from their established searching patterns.

Recommended Videos

“We deeply believe in consumer trust and choice, both for our user community and our partners,” said Verizon’s head of consumer products, Michael Albers. “In support of our commitment to trust and transparency, we are excited to launch OneSearch, an innovative new online search experience built for privacy-minded searchers. With it, you can search the internet with increased confidence, knowing your personal and search data isn’t being tracked, stored, or shared with advertisers.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

While big data breaches at Verizon-owned companies like Yahoo don’t help encourage the view of Verizon as a good steward of its users’ data and privacy, OneSearch does appear to do just that. Anti-tracking tools like Ghostery and Malwarebyte’s Chrome extension found no nefarious trackers of cookies when we visited the site. That also helps make it exceedingly fast, which is always welcome from a search engine.

Other privacy enhancements include encrypting your search terms and even the links you click on. They also expire within an hour (when Advanced Privacy Mode is enabled) making it even harder for anyone to track down what you’ve been looking at online.

There are some caveats to all this. OneSearch does track location information like your IP address, using it to contextualize the search results. That IP is encrypted however, and after four days (it’s stored to prevent network traffic abuse, like DDOS attacks) it is permanently deleted. OneSearch is also supported by advertisements, but they aren’t based on collected browsing data or your past activity, merely on your use of the search terms at the time you used them to show relevant ads. They’re contextual, but not personal.

OneSearch leverages Bing to provide its search results, so if you like the service offered by Bing and find it an accurate search engine, then Verizon’s OneSearch might be a good alternative. It should be a more private experience, even if some of your data is shared with Bing to make the search results more accurate. You can rest assured, at least, that the only information making the jump to Microsoft’s engine is what was provided to the search engine at the time of searching, and not everything that you’ve done over the past few days, weeks, or even over the life of your account, as is the case with some search engines.

OneSearch is available globally on desktop, but is designed exclusively for North American users at this time. Verizon plans a rollout of the platform to global audiences in the near future, and there is also an impending launch of an official Android and iOS application later this month.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is a freelance evergreen writer and occasional section coordinator, covering how to guides, best-of lists, and…
Bid farewell to this small but helpful Windows 11 feature
The Surface Pro 11 on a white table in front of a window.

As Microsoft mentions in a December 12 blog post, Windows 11 users will soon no longer receive future updates for the suggested actions menu. The helpful feature would offer you related actions when you copy items like dates or phone numbers with actions to create an event or make a call.

Microsoft first introduced the feature in a Windows 11 2022 update. It made the suggested actions menu appear and gave contextual information based on the copied data. Microsoft describes the feature as follows: "Suggested actions that appear when you copy a phone number or future date in Windows 11 are deprecated and will be removed in a future Windows 11 update."

Read more
The hype is real: Nvidia finally teases the RTX 50-series
A PC with some loot boxes on a desk. Marketing material for the RTX 50-series.

It's finally happening. Nvidia has just teased the upcoming RTX 50-series in a major way, with a full-on fan event leading up to the official announcement in January. Under the banner of #GeForceGreats, Nvidia is celebrating some of its best graphics cards, but it's already looking to the future. Here's what's happening and how to get involved.

After a long stretch of silence, the Nvidia GeForce social media accounts posted updates about GeForce at CES 2025, inviting fans to watch the keynote on January 6, 2025. We already knew about the keynote, but this is the first official confirmation that it won't be all about Nvidia's data center business -- we're definitely getting updates on next-gen gaming GPUs, too.

Read more
EV drivers are not going back to gas cars, global survey says
ev drivers are not going back to gas cars global survey says screenshot

Nearly all current owners of electric vehicles (EVs) are either satisfied or very satisfied with the experience, and 92% of them plan to buy another EV, according to a survey by the Global EV Drivers Alliance.

The survey of 23,000 EV drivers worldwide found that only 1% would return to a petrol or diesel car, while 4% would opt for a plug-in hybrid (PHEV) if they had to replace their car.

Read more