|
|
|
|
|
by tedsanders
2902 days ago
|
|
I think the concern isn't necessarily that Bing would associate query X with person Y. The concern is that Bing would even know that query X exists. For example, if Bing saw a spike in searches for "Aramco IPO July 4, 2018" and were to reveal it to a human or store it, that might be a serious leak of non-public information. Many searches reveal private information, even when they aren't associated with a user. |
|
Maybe I'm missing something obvious here, but how is that any different from Google or DuckDuckGo seeing the same spike?