Model Comparison 100% sign agreement
Model Editorial Structural Class Conf SETL Theme
deepseek/deepseek-v3.2-20251201 +0.34 +0.23 Moderate positive 0.08 0.34 Free Expression
@cf/meta/llama-4-scout-17b-16e-instruct lite +0.28 ND Mild positive 0.80 0.00 Digital Rights
@cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast lite 0.00 ND Neutral 0.80 0.00 Personal freedom
claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 +0.44 +0.26 Moderate positive 0.22 0.27 Privacy & Digital Autonomy
Section deepseek/deepseek-v3.2-20251201 @cf/meta/llama-4-scout-17b-16e-instruct lite @cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast lite claude-haiku-4-5-20251001
Preamble 0.00 ND ND 0.52
Article 1 ND ND ND 0.26
Article 2 ND ND ND ND
Article 3 ND ND ND 0.32
Article 4 ND ND ND 0.22
Article 5 ND ND ND ND
Article 6 ND ND ND ND
Article 7 ND ND ND 0.16
Article 8 ND ND ND ND
Article 9 ND ND ND ND
Article 10 ND ND ND ND
Article 11 ND ND ND ND
Article 12 0.32 ND ND 0.86
Article 13 ND ND ND ND
Article 14 ND ND ND ND
Article 15 ND ND ND ND
Article 16 ND ND ND ND
Article 17 0.10 ND ND 0.12
Article 18 ND ND ND 0.52
Article 19 0.54 ND ND 0.71
Article 20 ND ND ND ND
Article 21 ND ND ND ND
Article 22 ND ND ND ND
Article 23 ND ND ND 0.12
Article 24 ND ND ND ND
Article 25 ND ND ND ND
Article 26 ND ND ND 0.32
Article 27 0.46 ND ND ND
Article 28 ND ND ND ND
Article 29 ND ND ND 0.26
Article 30 ND ND ND ND
+0.44 Leaving Google has actively improved my life (pseudosingleton.com S:+0.26 )
475 points by speckx 2 days ago | 260 comments on HN | Moderate positive Contested Editorial · v3.7 · 2026-02-28 11:29:09 0
Summary Privacy & Digital Autonomy Advocates
This personal essay advocates leaving Google's ecosystem due to privacy violations and monopolistic control. The author champions privacy (Article 12) and freedom of information access (Article 19) as foundational human rights, describing personal life improvements from migrating to privacy-respecting alternatives. The site itself embodies these values through independent, transparent design without surveillance infrastructure.
Article Heatmap
Preamble: +0.52 — Preamble P Article 1: +0.26 — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood 1 Article 2: ND — Non-Discrimination Article 2: No Data — Non-Discrimination 2 Article 3: +0.32 — Life, Liberty, Security 3 Article 4: +0.22 — No Slavery 4 Article 5: ND — No Torture Article 5: No Data — No Torture 5 Article 6: ND — Legal Personhood Article 6: No Data — Legal Personhood 6 Article 7: +0.16 — Equality Before Law 7 Article 8: ND — Right to Remedy Article 8: No Data — Right to Remedy 8 Article 9: ND — No Arbitrary Detention Article 9: No Data — No Arbitrary Detention 9 Article 10: ND — Fair Hearing Article 10: No Data — Fair Hearing 10 Article 11: ND — Presumption of Innocence Article 11: No Data — Presumption of Innocence 11 Article 12: +0.86 — Privacy 12 Article 13: ND — Freedom of Movement Article 13: No Data — Freedom of Movement 13 Article 14: ND — Asylum Article 14: No Data — Asylum 14 Article 15: ND — Nationality Article 15: No Data — Nationality 15 Article 16: ND — Marriage & Family Article 16: No Data — Marriage & Family 16 Article 17: +0.12 — Property 17 Article 18: +0.52 — Freedom of Thought 18 Article 19: +0.71 — Freedom of Expression 19 Article 20: ND — Assembly & Association Article 20: No Data — Assembly & Association 20 Article 21: ND — Political Participation Article 21: No Data — Political Participation 21 Article 22: ND — Social Security Article 22: No Data — Social Security 22 Article 23: +0.12 — Work & Equal Pay 23 Article 24: ND — Rest & Leisure Article 24: No Data — Rest & Leisure 24 Article 25: ND — Standard of Living Article 25: No Data — Standard of Living 25 Article 26: +0.32 — Education 26 Article 27: ND — Cultural Participation Article 27: No Data — Cultural Participation 27 Article 28: ND — Social & International Order Article 28: No Data — Social & International Order 28 Article 29: +0.26 — Duties to Community 29 Article 30: ND — No Destruction of Rights Article 30: No Data — No Destruction of Rights 30
Negative Neutral Positive No Data
Aggregates
Editorial Mean +0.44 Structural Mean +0.26
Weighted Mean +0.42 Unweighted Mean +0.37
Max +0.86 Article 12 Min +0.12 Article 17
Signal 12 No Data 19
Volatility 0.23 (Medium)
Negative 0 Channels E: 0.6 S: 0.4
SETL +0.27 Editorial-dominant
FW Ratio 48% 27 facts · 29 inferences
Evidence 22% coverage
2H 7M 3L 19 ND
Theme Radar
Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.39 (2 articles) Security: 0.27 (2 articles) Legal: 0.16 (1 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.86 (1 articles) Personal: 0.32 (2 articles) Expression: 0.71 (1 articles) Economic & Social: 0.12 (1 articles) Cultural: 0.32 (1 articles) Order & Duties: 0.26 (1 articles)
HN Discussion 20 top-level · 29 replies
robin_reala 2026-02-27 20:21 UTC link
I degoogled back when they announced AMP email, and am in broad agreement with the author here. The only things I’ve found it hard to replace are YouTube, Arts & Culture, Google Books, and Books ngrams. Everything else has great alternatives to move to 100%, and Books is just a backup alongside archive.org and Hathi.

Even if you just stop using one piece of Google you’ll find yourself in a better place.

kyrra 2026-02-27 20:21 UTC link
If you don't like the AI feature, Google at least lets you turn it off: https://workspace.google.com/blog/product-announcements/upda...

Specifically in Gmail Settings:

> Smart features: Turn on smart features in Gmail, Chat, and Meet - When you turn this setting on, you agree to let Gmail, Chat, and Meet use your content and activity in these products to provide smart features and personalize your experience.

My wife turned this off because she didn't want typing suggestions or even grammar correction. After disabling the feature, she was much happier.

(googler, opinions are my own)

seaucre 2026-02-27 20:26 UTC link
Gmail can be made vanilla. It sounds like switching emails and improving their email hygiene was the real improvement.
Aurornis 2026-02-27 20:27 UTC link
> After giving them a fair shot, I think I can now honestly say that Brave and DuckDuckGo are better than Google for >90% of searches

I've had DuckDuckGo as my primary search engine for years and I couldn't disagree with this more. DuckDuckGo is fine for quickly getting to well known sites where I can't remember the URL, but it's objectively worse for trying to find everything from Reddit threads to Recipes. Their depth of indexing sites like Reddit feels dramatically worse lately and recipe search will predictably give me the same list of SEO spam blogs regardless of what I type in.

DuckDuckGo also seems to be doing the YouTube search thing that everyone hates where after the first several results it just starts throwing semi-related things at you instead.

I still add "!g" to my DuckDuckGo queries when I don't have time to mess around or if the first page of results is obvious SEO spam.

The other main point in this blog post isn't really about Google at all, it's just what happened when the author set up a a new e-mail address and didn't sign up for a lot of sites with it:

> Leaving Gmail also gave me the opportunity to start implementing better digital hygiene. I no longer give my primary email to fly-by-night sites, and I'm deliberate with what things I'm signing up for.

I thought there was going to be some substance to this post but it reads like someone congratulating themselves for a choice they made and then trying to backwards justify it.

bitpush 2026-02-27 20:35 UTC link
> I don't knowingly use AI

> Sometimes I will use Kagi's "assistant" model whilst coding. Particularly to clean up existing code/stylesheets

The only moral abortion is my abortion.

WarmWash 2026-02-27 20:45 UTC link
The problem isn't Google.

The problem is that people want a "free internet" without ads, and without any form of data harvesting. But they also don't want to pay any money, because the internet, as we all know, "is free".

In 30 years, no one has figured this out. So I feel pretty confident in stating that it's either gonna be ads or payments. And if we switch to a payment model, then the internet becomes another system where the poor are naturally disadvantaged and the rich get unlimited benefit, so I don't think any of the complaining will go away anyway. Just a new set of problems.

xnx 2026-02-27 20:47 UTC link
> After giving them a fair shot, I think I can now honestly say that Brave and DuckDuckGo are better than Google for >90% of searches

I still scratch my head how DuckDuckGo has made people excited for Bing search results in a way Microsoft never has.

nvr219 2026-02-27 20:50 UTC link
I use fastmail and kagi and love both. I wonder what OP is using instead of google docs for live co-authoring... Word Online? lol
realprimoh 2026-02-27 20:51 UTC link
This being on the front page of hacker news is embarassing. Low substance post that is misleading if anything - I was hoping for a career reflection. Not a low-quality "pat on the back" post of no value
paxys 2026-02-27 21:00 UTC link
AI is an area where having decades of private data hosted and indexed by a third party is actually paying off with a direct return (vs just using it to surface ads). All moral qualms about FOSS and whatever else aside, asking a question in plain english and having an "AI assistant" digging through years' worth of photos, emails, events, chats, restaurant reservations and more and returning an incredibly detailed answer that no person ever could feels like the magic of tech being realized in front of our eyes.

Would I prefer this was all open technology instead? Yeah, of course. But it is abundantly clear that economic incentives don't allow open source to compete with the big players, and that's just how it is.

arcade79 2026-02-27 21:03 UTC link
Leaving Google was the best thing I did, some 10 years ago. It reduced my stress level dramatically. I had no idea about how stressed I was at G. The release, when leaving, was immense.

Never ever, will I return to big tech.

However, having said that, never ever, will I regret having joined. It was an amazing journey.

asim 2026-02-27 21:10 UTC link
This is very interesting and timely. I've been working on something to replace a lot of addictive or exploitive services we use today but there's some caveats. Will people pay? They pay for Kagi but will they generally pay for other things like news, maps, video, chat, weather, etc. The second question is what's stopping people from really quitting? I get the feeling it's sort of habits that we get stuck with. Even I still use Google. But the mention of brave and knowing brave has a generous free search tier for their api makes me think it's possible to replace Google search. But habits die hard. New habit formation may require an alternative approach hence so many buying into ChatGPT.

One issue I also find with this sort of thing. It's hard to have a longer discussion that leads to building good alternatives. A thread appears, we comment and then it disappears. There needs to be more public discourse that leads to tangible results... To real issues that get solved.

stephantul 2026-02-27 21:11 UTC link
Ecosia is not just Bing, we offer a bunch of indexes, including bing and Google.

We’re moving to our own index, which we are building in collaboration with Qwant, under the name European Search Perspective.

I do see the point of the article however.

hosteur 2026-02-27 21:44 UTC link
Just use Kagi. I have been for several years now. I have not regretted it one minute. I have not missed Google at all. Kagi is just so much better. And I like the business model.
andrewk17 2026-02-27 21:45 UTC link
I spent the effort to de-google a several years back and switched to Proton. After years of being on Proton, I recently switched back to GMail.

It didn't really make my life any better. And at this point, I think I see more value in having AI be able to piece together information to serve me up useful information than trying to protect my privacy within email (I couldn't get off Google Photos, it's just too useful).

Willish42 2026-02-27 21:51 UTC link
I've been meaning to get off Gmail, and Proton Mail does seem like my favorite of the alternatives from a quick glance, but I'm also concerned about privacy focused services like Proton getting blocked or compromised in the US... This was a pretty good read

Also,

> I do my best to boycott bad things. And I fail pretty often. I still use Amazon on occasion and I can’t get off Spotify. I use Uber and DoorDash a lot more than I’d like. And I have too many Apple products/services.

OK, I can intuit why most of those are bad, but can somebody give me a good-faith interpretation on what's bad about Apple?

I'd assume it's the working conditions and material extraction processes in China, parts of Africa, and elsewhere, but isn't that true of every piece of consumer technology? The only better companies for consumer hardware that come to mind are Framework and Google for recycling parts and raw materials, but the whole point of the article is about de-googling and Framework's products are relatively niche and at a much lower price and performance / market category.

pkilgore 2026-02-27 22:44 UTC link
Fastmail and Kagi are not noticeable expenses (to me) but are a noticeable increase in quality of life.

Might not have been true at one point but if you can spare the cost I highly recommend either.

aetherspawn 2026-02-28 00:15 UTC link
I’ll admit when it first came out I hated the Gemini summary. It hallucinated a lot. Back then it was useless.

But now I don’t mind it: it’s lightning fast (for an LLM capable of mid level reasoning), but more importantly unlimited and free. And it puts search results alongside the summary so I can ignore it if I like. These days I probably use it on around 90% of searches.

ekjhgkejhgk 2026-02-28 09:18 UTC link
I bought my domain and I've been using Tuta for my important things (still have gmail for the newsletters etc but rarely lookat it). Couldn't be happier.
rurban 2026-02-28 10:13 UTC link
I switched from duckduckgo to seek ninja about a year ago, and it's much better. Kagi was much better, but I certainly won't pay for search nor AI
memset 2026-02-27 20:27 UTC link
What have you done for email?
nomel 2026-02-27 20:30 UTC link
> from Reddit threads

Google is the only search engine allowed to index Reddit [1].

[1] https://www.lifewire.com/google-reddit-deal-8685766

direwolf20 2026-02-27 20:30 UTC link
It will still always analyse your emails for advertising purposes.
bartread 2026-02-27 20:34 UTC link
Same experience with DuckDuckGo. I've probably been using it as my primary search engine for, well, I'm not absolutely sure, but I want to say it was sometime during the pandemic so that must be, what, 5 years?

Honestly, it's got to the point where 8 or 9 times out of 10 I switch to Google search because I'm unhappy with the results I'm getting... and really it's at the point where, why am I even still using it?

It's just not very good.

It reminds of something like AltaVista back in the day, or one of those other old skool search engines, with how poor its results are relative to evil old Google.

jrmg 2026-02-27 20:34 UTC link
DuckDuckGo is fine for quickly getting to well known sites where I can't remember the URL, but it's objectively worse for trying to find everything from Reddit threads to Recipes.

Agree with this. DDG just seems to have less ‘in’ it.

I’ve been playing with old 8052 microcontrollers recently, and it’s not unusual for DDG to return zero results on slightly esoteric technical searches, when Google will have plenty of relevant results (and it’s not just that Google is less strict about search terms - often I’m searching specifically for keywords).

jeffbee 2026-02-27 20:36 UTC link
Kagi's models are also incredibly bad. I can't imagine how this person believes they are getting fair value from them.
paxys 2026-02-27 20:57 UTC link
This is the daily "Google is bad" post. Best to ignore it and move on.
latexr 2026-02-27 20:58 UTC link
> I wonder what OP is using instead of google docs for live co-authoring

Probably nothing? It’s not like that’s a need that everyone has.

bubblewand 2026-02-27 21:04 UTC link
Actually-free gets suppressed by free-with-ads. We don’t know how much the truly free hobbyist-volunteer ecosystem would pick up without competition from ad-supported options (often with deep pockets for advertising and promotion, plus monopolist positioning to cross-promote with other products in some cases). Ad-supported options suppress usership of truly free options, which suppresses interest in volunteering time and resources.

It also suppresses open protocols. Protocols stagnated as the Internet centralized and commercialized for a reason. Some of these things could just be protocols.

Not saying that would cover everything, but I am sure those two factors would “step in” to replace some aspects of the ad-supported Internet, if the ads went away. How much, I don’t know.

layer8 2026-02-27 21:06 UTC link
Critical services like email and search should be treated as a public utility. Those cost money as well, but are affordable to almost anyone, and social safety nets should be taking care of those who don’t.
spacebear 2026-02-27 21:10 UTC link
Not the OP, but I alternate between self-hosted instances of Outline (https://www.getoutline.com/) and Nextcloud (with Collabora) for this. Outline I actually like better than Google Docs for most things. Nextcloud is a little rough, but it has change tracking, which I need sometimes.

I’ve also seen a lot of people using Cryptpad recently, which I think wraps OnlyOffice.

fuzzy2 2026-02-27 21:26 UTC link
Well, yes, DuckDuckGo is not Google. You have to accept that. Not just surface-level, but for real.

What made this easy for me is that Google is also no longer Google. Ever since it started basically ignoring my actual search query, I stopped using it. I used to be very good at using Google, too.

DuckDuckGo is quite bad at times, yes. But then, so is Google. If I need to find something I cannot put into search terms, LLMs are helpful. From my trial experience I would say Kagi is also a capable search machine, for some niches.

swiftcoder 2026-02-27 21:32 UTC link
Does this work outside of workspaces? I didn't think public gmail accounts had the option
reddalo 2026-02-27 21:41 UTC link
I love Qwant and I think it works better than DuckDuckGo.

I can't wait for the European index.

simon666 2026-02-27 21:52 UTC link
> So I feel pretty confident in stating that it's either gonna be ads or payments.

I'm assuming you mean exclusive disjunction here, but in reality it's something closer to a conjunction, if not occasionally an inclusive disjunction. So many subscription services also have ads and if they don't, they eventually do.

The problem isn't that people want things for free; hell, we all pay for access to the internet already. The problem is a shit-ton of monied interests want to squeeze every possible dollar from people always. So we're slammed with ads and our behavior is manipulated and tracked and monetized and sold.

This was not how things were on the internet or the web in mid 90s. It was not the ethos then, but it became the ethos when monied interests took over.

s_dev 2026-02-27 21:56 UTC link
It is better, I was a paying subscriber. Then I realised they pay money to Yandex and I feel and obligation to support Ukraine right now. When the war is over or Kagi drop Yandex support I will be a paying subscriber again.
herrherrmann 2026-02-27 21:57 UTC link
Apple is very anti-consumer, locking devices down, using planned obsolescence, fighting hard against movements for more open and fairer market practices and standards (e.g. switching to the standard USB-C port, allowing third-party app stores, exploiting developers releasing software on their platforms).
wavemode 2026-02-27 22:07 UTC link
Your comment is of even less value than the article. The fact that you find this subject matter uninteresting, is also uninteresting. Clearly other people feel differently.
al_borland 2026-02-27 22:08 UTC link
I had a similar experience with DDG. I felt like I had to add “!g” to everything, which doesn’t actually move one away from Google, it just creates friction.

Kagi, however, has been a different experience for me. I haven’t felt the need to go to Google at all. If I can’t find it with Kagi, I’m confident I won’t find it with Google either. There have also been several times where I was on an outage call with a double dozen people all looking for answers to some issue. Everyone was coming up empty with Google, and I was able to find something that solved the issue pretty quickly with Kagi.

NittLion78 2026-02-27 22:28 UTC link
I can testify that Qwant, if nothing else, is a superior image search engine (basically does what GIS used to do 10-15 years ago) and it's better for just getting to a quick answer without your first 4 results being ad-driven.

Unfortunately, when needing to do deeper dives on things, Google is still more or less the best for results past the first page in my experience, though it's rare I need to dig that deep these days.

raincole 2026-02-27 22:30 UTC link
HK likes bashing big corps, but Google is the special soft spot for us. By 'soft' I mean easy to punch.
tetrisgm 2026-02-27 22:36 UTC link
I switched from Fastmail to iCloud Mail and I’m happy.
vvpan 2026-02-27 23:03 UTC link
Fastmail user for a decade. Does the job.
drnick1 2026-02-27 23:07 UTC link
> The problem is that people want a "free internet" without ads

Just run an ad blocker and be done with it. The business model of the website is not my problem; if websites cannot cover their costs without printing ads that I do not want to see, then they will disappear. We will be left with websites that are actually useful, for example businesses operating a website to sell things, or that are funded through donations (e.g. free software).

raincole 2026-02-27 23:10 UTC link
The trick is to say ignorant. If you know nothing about AI of course you're not knowingly using AI.
zeusly 2026-02-27 23:17 UTC link
Will I ever be able to pay for ecosia?
freddydumont 2026-02-27 23:52 UTC link
Ads weren’t that much of a problem when they were contextual. I remember video game websites younger me used to visit having their background plastered with latest release by a AAA studio. This is contextual advertisement. It has no privacy concern.

The issue is that ads now are behavioural, privacy invasive and centralized. No matter what site you visit you’ll get unrelated, possibly scam, advertising that depends on a profile built by a large American corporation. It’s just not reasonable in this context to avoid using an ad blocker.

So yes, the problem is indeed Google (and Meta etc) who monopolized the advertising market. I would say the root cause is lack of antitrust enforcement.

magarnicle 2026-02-28 02:00 UTC link
What do you look for in Arts & Culture? I find https://www.getdailyart.com/ pretty great if you are mostly just interested in painting.
Zizizizz 2026-02-28 07:23 UTC link
I think https://typst.app/#start has multi user support, you'd have to learn typst though
Editorial Channel
What the content says
+0.90
Article 12 Privacy
High advocacy framing
Editorial
+0.90
SETL
+0.30

CORE THEME: Article's central argument is that Google violates privacy rights through email scanning, search tracking, and algorithmic data collection. Author explicitly advocates for privacy-respecting alternatives as human rights necessity.

+0.85
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
High advocacy framing
Editorial
+0.85
SETL
+0.55

CORE THEME: Article's second major argument champions freedom of expression through open information access. Author advocates for 'the open web' as expression/information ecosystem, explicitly rejects algorithmic gatekeeping as suppression of expression.

+0.60
Preamble Preamble
Medium advocacy framing
Editorial
+0.60
SETL
+0.35

Preamble implicitly engaged through article's framing of human dignity as requiring privacy, autonomy, and freedom from corporate exploitation.

+0.60
Article 18 Freedom of Thought
Medium advocacy framing
Editorial
+0.60
SETL
+0.35

Article advocates for freedom from algorithmic control of conscience and thought. Author explicitly rejects Gmail's algorithmic email sorting as violation of autonomous decision-making.

+0.40
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Medium framing
Editorial
+0.40
SETL
+0.28

Article frames privacy as essential to personal security and liberty; leaving Google restores security of personal data and information access.

+0.40
Article 26 Education
Medium framing
Editorial
+0.40
SETL
+0.28

Article frames information access and learning from diverse sources as educational and cultural good. Discovery and exploration are positioned as fulfilling intellectual activity.

+0.30
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Medium framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
+0.17

Article critiques how Google creates unequal access and control, denying users meaningful choice in digital life.

+0.30
Article 4 No Slavery
Low framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
+0.24

Article implies data exploitation as form of servitude through 'if you're not paying, you're the product' framing, equating user-as-product to economic bondage.

+0.30
Article 29 Duties to Community
Medium framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
+0.17

Article acknowledges individual responsibility ('I do my best to boycott') while recognizing systemic constraints. Frames personal choice as meaningful contribution to collective resistance.

+0.20
Article 7 Equality Before Law
Medium framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
+0.14

Article critiques Google's monopolistic power preventing equal legal standing—users cannot meaningfully contest terms or choose alternatives on equal footing.

+0.20
Article 17 Property
Low framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
+0.20

Article implicitly engages with property rights through 'if you're not paying, you're the product' framing, suggesting personal data as exploited property.

+0.20
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
+0.20

Article briefly critiques gig economy platforms (Uber, DoorDash) as exploitative, implying unfair labor practices.

ND
Article 2 Non-Discrimination

Article does not engage with discrimination or equality on protected grounds.

ND
Article 5 No Torture

Article does not engage with torture or cruel treatment.

ND
Article 6 Legal Personhood

Article does not directly engage with recognition as person before law.

ND
Article 8 Right to Remedy

Article does not engage with effective remedy for human rights violations.

ND
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

Article does not engage with arbitrary detention or arrest.

ND
Article 10 Fair Hearing

Article does not engage with fair trial or impartial justice.

ND
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

Article does not engage with presumption of innocence.

ND
Article 13 Freedom of Movement

Article does not engage with freedom of movement or choice of residence.

ND
Article 14 Asylum

Article does not engage with asylum or refugee rights.

ND
Article 15 Nationality

Article does not engage with nationality or statelessness.

ND
Article 16 Marriage & Family

Article does not engage with family or marriage rights.

ND
Article 20 Assembly & Association

Article does not engage with freedom of peaceful assembly or association.

ND
Article 21 Political Participation

Article does not engage with political participation or governance.

ND
Article 22 Social Security

Article does not engage with social security, employment insurance, or welfare.

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

Article does not engage with rest, leisure, or limitation of working hours.

ND
Article 25 Standard of Living

Article does not engage with adequate standard of living or health.

ND
Article 27 Cultural Participation

Article does not engage with participation in cultural or artistic life.

ND
Article 28 Social & International Order

Article does not engage with social and international order.

ND
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights

Article does not engage with prohibition of misuse of UDHR provisions.

Structural Channel
What the site does
+0.80
Article 12 Privacy
High advocacy framing
Structural
+0.80
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.30

Site embodies Article 12 principles through independent hosting, no visible tracking infrastructure, transparent authorship, user control (theme selection), and absence of commercial data extraction.

+0.50
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
High advocacy framing
Structural
+0.50
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.55

Site enables independent expression through single-author authorship (not corporate platform), reader engagement (email contact for discussion), and transparent voice.

+0.40
Preamble Preamble
Medium advocacy framing
Structural
+0.40
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.35

Site structure reflects preamble values: independent, transparent, respectful of user autonomy and dignity.

+0.40
Article 18 Freedom of Thought
Medium advocacy framing
Structural
+0.40
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.35

Site respects user autonomy through transparent design, no behavioral manipulation, and voluntary reader engagement (email contact).

+0.20
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Medium framing
Structural
+0.20
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.17

Site treats all visitors equally without paywalls or user-tier restrictions.

+0.20
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Medium framing
Structural
+0.20
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.28

Site's privacy-conscious design supports personal security and liberty through absence of surveillance.

+0.20
Article 26 Education
Medium framing
Structural
+0.20
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.28

Site shares knowledge freely without paywalls or access restrictions, contributing to public understanding.

+0.20
Article 29 Duties to Community
Medium framing
Structural
+0.20
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.17

Site invites community engagement and discourse, suggesting author views personal expression as contributing to shared understanding.

+0.10
Article 4 No Slavery
Low framing
Structural
+0.10
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.24

Site respects user autonomy by not exploiting data.

+0.10
Article 7 Equality Before Law
Medium framing
Structural
+0.10
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.14

Site offers equal treatment and voice to all visitors.

0.00
Article 17 Property
Low framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.20

Site respects user data as property by not extracting or commodifying it.

0.00
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low framing
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.20

No structural elements address labor rights.

ND
Article 2 Non-Discrimination

No structural elements specifically address discrimination.

ND
Article 5 No Torture

No structural elements engage with this provision.

ND
Article 6 Legal Personhood

No structural elements specifically address this.

ND
Article 8 Right to Remedy

No structural elements address this provision.

ND
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

No structural elements engage with this.

ND
Article 10 Fair Hearing

No structural elements address this.

ND
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

No structural elements address this provision.

ND
Article 13 Freedom of Movement

No structural elements address this provision.

ND
Article 14 Asylum

No structural elements address this.

ND
Article 15 Nationality

No structural elements address this provision.

ND
Article 16 Marriage & Family

No structural elements address this.

ND
Article 20 Assembly & Association

No structural elements address this provision.

ND
Article 21 Political Participation

No structural elements address this.

ND
Article 22 Social Security

No structural elements address this provision.

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No structural elements address this.

ND
Article 25 Standard of Living

No structural elements address this provision.

ND
Article 27 Cultural Participation

No structural elements address this.

ND
Article 28 Social & International Order

No structural elements address this provision.

ND
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights

No structural elements address this.

Supplementary Signals
How this content communicates, beyond directional lean. Learn more
Epistemic Quality
How well-sourced and evidence-based is this content?
0.66 medium claims
Sources
0.7
Evidence
0.6
Uncertainty
0.7
Purpose
0.8
Propaganda Flags
4 manipulative rhetoric techniques found
4 techniques detected
loaded language
"Google sucks," "Chrome is literal spyware," "Google is one of the worst"
causal oversimplification
Title frames leaving Google as singular cause for multiple improvements: cleaner email, fun searching, cleaner conscience
exaggeration
"infinitely better" browsers, "impossible" to change search on iOS, "virtual monopoly" YouTube
bandwagon
"most people hate Google and are just looking for an excuse to quit"; "several friends I would never have expected are using DuckDuckGo"
Emotional Tone
Emotional character: positive/negative, intensity, authority
hopeful
Valence
+0.7
Arousal
0.5
Dominance
0.5
Transparency
Does the content identify its author and disclose interests?
0.60
✓ Author ✗ Conflicts
More signals: context, framing & audience
Solution Orientation
Does this content offer solutions or only describe problems?
0.85 solution oriented
Reader Agency
0.8
Stakeholder Voice
Whose perspectives are represented in this content?
0.35 2 perspectives
Speaks: individuals
About: corporationinstitution
Temporal Framing
Is this content looking backward, at the present, or forward?
present short term
Geographic Scope
What geographic area does this content cover?
global
Complexity
How accessible is this content to a general audience?
accessible low jargon general
Longitudinal 721 HN snapshots · 27 evals
+1 0 −1 HN
Audit Trail 47 entries
2026-03-02 13:52 eval_success Evaluated: Moderate positive (0.35) - -
2026-03-02 13:52 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.42 exceeds threshold (3 models) - -
2026-03-02 13:52 eval Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.35 (Moderate positive) 15,919 tokens +0.10
2026-03-02 00:02 dlq_auto_replay DLQ auto-replay: message 98080 re-enqueued - -
2026-03-01 18:31 eval_success Evaluated: Mild positive (0.25) - -
2026-03-01 18:31 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.42 exceeds threshold (3 models) - -
2026-03-01 18:31 eval Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.25 (Mild positive) 16,204 tokens -0.30
2026-03-01 15:52 eval_success Evaluated: Moderate positive (0.55) - -
2026-03-01 15:52 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.42 exceeds threshold (3 models) - -
2026-03-01 15:52 rater_validation_warn Validation warnings for model deepseek-v3.2: 0W 3R - -
2026-03-01 15:52 eval Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.55 (Moderate positive) 15,701 tokens +0.32
2026-03-01 13:37 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.42 exceeds threshold (3 models) - -
2026-03-01 13:37 eval_success Evaluated: Mild positive (0.22) - -
2026-03-01 13:37 eval Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.22 (Mild positive) 15,600 tokens +0.07
2026-03-01 01:03 dlq_auto_replay DLQ auto-replay: message 97922 re-enqueued - -
2026-03-01 00:51 eval_success Evaluated: Mild positive (0.16) - -
2026-03-01 00:51 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.42 exceeds threshold (4 models) - -
2026-03-01 00:51 eval Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.16 (Mild positive) 15,406 tokens
2026-02-28 23:31 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Leaving Google has actively improved my life - -
2026-02-28 23:31 eval_failure Evaluation failed: AbortError: The operation was aborted - -
2026-02-28 23:19 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Leaving Google has actively improved my life - -
2026-02-28 23:19 eval_failure Evaluation failed: AbortError: The operation was aborted - -
2026-02-28 23:11 eval_failure Evaluation failed: AbortError: The operation was aborted - -
2026-02-28 23:10 eval_failure Evaluation failed: AbortError: The operation was aborted - -
2026-02-28 18:56 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Leaving Google has actively improved my life - -
2026-02-28 15:38 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: +0.28 (Mild positive) +0.18
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 15:25 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 11:29 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5-20251001: +0.42 (Moderate positive)
2026-02-28 10:30 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: +0.10 (Mild positive) -0.18
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 09:10 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: +0.28 (Mild positive) 0.00
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 08:05 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: +0.28 (Mild positive) 0.00
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 07:52 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 05:59 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 05:51 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: +0.28 (Mild positive) +0.18
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 05:46 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: +0.10 (Mild positive) +0.10
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 05:44 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 05:31 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 04:32 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 03:07 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 02:43 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 02:38 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 02:09 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 01:59 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 01:47 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 01:24 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral)
reasoning
Personal blog post
2026-02-28 01:07 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: 0.00 (Neutral) 0.00
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy
2026-02-28 01:00 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: 0.00 (Neutral)
reasoning
ED Slight positive lean on privacy