

So who, exactly, is this for? Well, according to Weinberg, that would be pretty much everyone. "Too many people believe you simply can't expect privacy on the Internet" The app also blocked some display ads, which was an added bonus. The experience felt much like browsing the web on iOS's Safari, but with the additional benefit of being able to see what ad trackers were shut down on each website we visited. We downloaded the DuckDuckGo Privacy Browser, as the app is officially called, on an iPhone and gave it a spin. In addition to blocking ad trackers, the app forces HTTPS on sites that have it but for whatever reason didn't serve you the encrypted page.


The only app that matters this year is Signal
