It feels a bit odd that, to provide feedback and help improve Kagi, we need to let our pants down in public. I understand that lots of people use sites like Facebook where they expose much more of themselves, but that's another story. Privacy is one of Kagi's key features, and in light of that, the lack of privacy on Kagifeedback.org sticks out.
Over time, you'll inevitably post a lot of things in here: The country you're from, the places you're in, your search preferences, your views of life that lead to your search preferences, your devices and preferred software, the devices you own, your field of expertise or your family situation, screenshots of your desktops, videos of your mobile screen, and so on, It's almost like a personal fingerprint.
Curious what your fingerprint looks like? Try the following query on Kagi:
Who is username on kagifeedback.org?
If you're not impressed by the results, try again the next day, when Kagi will come up with something fresh. One day it'll seem bland, but on other days, it may seem like every little remark you made has been disseminated to track your down. I understand the randomness (I guess), but randomness may stll seem creepy.
This one is also fun: Hide a private remark in one of your posts and wait how long it takes until Kagi's AI picks up on it.
I'm wondering if there's any benefit at all in running kagifeedback.org as a public place for all to see and crawl - because I can't come up with one. Even for Kagi, it's a rather intimate place - it has nasty bugs and half-brewed ideas. Who would want any of this to end up in a search index?