

The company says that had prevented most ads from showing up in videos during testing, but any ad that does pop up for viewers will not be personalized. While YouTube will still register a user's views, the videos they watch will not add any information to their advertising profile. One new feature is the Duck Player, a YouTube player that prevents the website from serving the viewer targeted ads. The company has also bundled the browser with new features, some of which were requested by testers who've been using it over the past few months. Now, the beta browser is finally open to the public and can be downloaded - clicking this link will automatically load its DMG file - from DuckDuckGo's website.

The company first gave us a glimpse of its desktop web browser in December last year before launching it as a closed beta in April.

All Mac users can now take DuckDuckGo's browser and its built-in privacy protections for a spin.
