How green is your search engine? If you're using Green Maven, Truevert, Ecocho, EcoSearch or GoodTree, probably pretty green. Some surface green content in search regults, some promise to offset your ...
If you browse Snopes.com, you'll likely come across the advice, "If it seems too good to be true, it it probably is" on pages about social media scams. While this platitude is certainly worth ...
Ask the search engine Ecosia about “Paris to Prague” and flight booking websites dominate the results. Ecosia’s CEO, Christian Kroll, would prefer to present more train options, which he considers ...
Where conservation meets bottom line, too often there’s only one winner. At this critical juncture in the fight against climate change, scientists have warned we are on track to miss long-term ...
Search engine Ecosia will no longer pledge to plant one tree for each individual search, instead investing in a broader array of environmental solutions including solar power. The platform, which ...
Berlin-based Ecosia, best known as the tree-planting search engine, has teamed up with French startup Kanop to monitor its reforestation efforts from space. With around 20 million users, Ecosia is the ...
Christian Kroll, a German entrepreneur, created Ecosia in 2009 from his Berlin apartment, where it became the world's first non-profit search engine. He continues to run the non-profit as its CEO.