Qwant


Qwant is a French web search engine, launched in July 2013 and operated from Paris. It is one of the few EU-based search engines with its own indexing engine. It claims not to employ user tracking or personalize search results in order to avoid trapping users in a filter bubble. It is available in 26 languages.
The website processes well over 10 million search requests per day and over 50 million individual users a month worldwide, spread over its three main entry points: the normal homepage, a "light" version and a "Qwant Junior" portal for children that filters results.
In the development phase, Qwant searches were powered by Bing in addition to its own indexing capabilities. Qwant also confirmed the use of Bing advertising network.
As of March 2019, Qwant is the 86th most visited website in France and the 1625th most visited website in the world.

Search engine

The search engine entered public beta on 16 February 2013, after two years of research and development. The first stable version was released on 4 July 2013. A new version was made available in April 2015.
In October 2015, Qwant released Qwant Lite, a lighter and faster version of Qwant.com, aimed at being user-friendly for those with older browsers and others that do not have powerful or resource-rich computers. Integrated features like video playback and JavaScript were removed and the on-site content was streamlined. The design of this version mimics that of Google's minimalist interface.
The child-friendly version was developed in cooperation with the French Ministry of Education.
According to its founder, Qwant does not want to compete with Google but prefers "to show something different". Users can create a free account, which allows posting on the "boards", a feature with functions similar to those of a social bookmarking platform.
Earlier stand-out features, such as a knowledge graph based on Wikipedia, seem to have been discontinued.
In July 2016, Mozilla signed a deal with Qwant to allow them to distribute an officially sanctioned version of the Firefox web browser with Qwant as the default search engine. Currently, Qwant has a web browser based on Firefox on the Apple App Store available for iOS.
When it was launched in 2017, the Brave web browser featured Qwant as one of its default search engines.
The French government in 2018 decreed that all government searches be done using Qwant.
In June 2019, Qwant launched Qwant Maps, an open source mapping service that uses the OpenStreetMap database to deliver privacy respecting maps and routing. It also unveiled Masq by Qwant, an open source technology that allows online services to offer personalized results from data securely stored on the user's device.
In March 2019, Google added Qwant to the Chrome default search list for French users.

Company

The eponymous company behind the search engine was co-founded in February 2011 by Jean-Manuel Rozan, a financier; Éric Leandri, a specialist in computer security; and Patrick Constant, a search engine expert. It employs over 160 people, spread over five French cities and has offices in Germany and Italy.
The company says that it makes money through commissions it receives when users visit advertised websites like eBay and Tripadvisor from its search results.
From 2011 to 2014, Qwant acquired a total funding of €3.5 million, part of it as a loan. In 2014, it received additional funding, including a €6 million investment from Axel Springer Digital Ventures in return for a 20% stake in the company. In 2016 the European Investment Bank invested €25 million.

Privacy

By virtue of being based in Europe, users gain some protection due to stringent European privacy laws. Qwant offers protections based on the new General Data Protection Regulation, which took effect in May 2018.
Qwant's Privacy Policy states that "as a principle, Qwant does not collect data about its users when they search". It claims not to use any cookie nor any other tracking technology.
Qwant seems to take numerous technical precautions to limit third parties from gaining insight into users search queries. For example, image-search results are made by routing images through Qwant servers, so that the websites serving the images are not informed of the user's identity.
Qwant struck a deal with the like-minded, privacy-centric keyboard, Fleksy, in 2018. Effectively, creating the most private search, available in any messenger application.
The website also states, in its privacy statement, that it resists French government surveillance:

Criticism

Shortly after the release, some observers expressed doubts about the nature of Qwant. According to them, Qwant may not really be a search engine but simply a website aggregating results of other search engines like Bing and Amazon, and that the "Qnowledge Graph" is based on Wikipedia. The company has rejected the reports and asserts that they do have their own Web crawler and used other search engines in their primary developmental phase only for semantic indexing related purposes. In June 2019, Qwant announced a partnership with Microsoft to power its own crawlers and algorithms using the Microsoft Azure cloud services while preserving the user's privacy. Microsoft said that Qwant "masters its technology, including its algorithm, its index and its client infrastructure, without collecting personal data, to better secure the respect for privacy of its users and the confidentiality of their searches".
While respecting privacy, the terms of service state that these may be changed at any time:
Qwant reserves the right to unilaterally modify these terms of service to adapt to the future developments of the site and/or its operation.
The early versions of Qwant copied many design cues from Google.

Reception

The New York Times drew a comparison to Quaero, an earlier attempt to create a European search engine to rival Google, which shut down in 2013 after investments of over €250 million.
Several French newspapers and news sites talked about Qwant just after its beta launch in February 2013 and its final launch in July 2013.
The service received public support from Emmanuel Macron, then Minister of the Economy and Finance and future President of France.