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DuckDuckGo Adds AI Voice Chat to Duck.ai With Privacy Protections

DuckDuckGo has announced new voice chat capabilities for Duck.ai, the private AI chatbot platform it launched last March.

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The new feature lets users have real-time voice conversations with large language models (LLMs) through an encrypted relay connection. OpenAI provides the LLMs that power voice chats, but DuckDuckGo says that neither it nor OpenAI stores any audio after conversations end.

"Voice chats in Duck.ai are private, anonymized by us, and never used to train the underlying AI," the company said in its announcement. OpenAI is also contractually limited in how it can use voice chat data. Here's how DuckDuckGo describes the service:

DuckDuckGo protects your audio stream and voice data in several ways, to ensure it can only be accessed by OpenAI, (the model provider for voice chats) and only for the purpose of responding to your prompts:

  • Ephemeral processing: Your live audio is streamed only while you're speaking. Once the session ends, neither DuckDuckGo nor OpenAI keeps recordings of your voice.
  • No training: Your audio and the model's responses are not used to train AI models.
  • Secure connection: Audio streams are encrypted in transit through WebRTC and our relay server.
  • Zero data retention: Neither DuckDuckGo nor OpenAI retains any conversation data after you end a voice chat.

The feature works in most browsers except for Firefox, for which support is still in the works, according to the company. Voice chat is free within daily limits and doesn't require an account, while subscribers ($10/month) get higher daily limits in addition to DuckDuckGo VPN access, Personal Information Removal, and Identity Theft Restoration.

Users can disable voice chat at any time through Duck.ai's settings if they change their mind about using the feature. Duck.ai also offers access to non-voice models from OpenAI, Meta, Anthropic, and Mistral.

Top Rated Comments

7 weeks ago
Why companies always think people want AI to be in their products?
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 weeks ago
As always, if you’re not paying for it, you are the product. And with OpenAI, even if you do pay for it you are probably the product.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Bazza1 Avatar
7 weeks ago
Besides the concerns with what the AI providers might do with info, bear in mind that DDG is based in the US, so all of its privacy promises are tainted by what the government and it's agencies demand of the company.
Look instead to AI providers in the EU, where privacy and security laws are much more stringent - even with governments.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
7 weeks ago
Privacy protection -> sending all the data to AI gigants like google/openAI etc.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
WarmWinterHat Avatar
7 weeks ago

This is all well and good if there’s a “AI features” switch somewhere in the settings for me to toggle off.
Super easy with DDG:

https://duckduckgo.com/settings#aifeatures
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
HouseLannister Avatar
7 weeks ago
This is all talking about sending my voice to OpenAI, which I am very uncomfortable with despite their assurances. It would feel much more secure if it was making an on-device transcript and sending that to OpenAI.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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