DuckDuckGo has built its reputation on privacy-first search, but this week, its AI assistant landed in hot water for an entirely different reason. Apparently, Duck.ai confidently claimed that U.S. President Donald Trump had died of rabies earlier this month, complete with fabricated details about Vice President JD Vance, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and fake supporting news reports. None of it was true.
A fake Reddit campaign managed to fool Duck’s AI
According to Futurism, the bizarre response wasn’t the result of a single hallucination. Instead, it appears to have been triggered by a coordinated misinformation campaign originating from Reddit’s r/poisonai community, where users deliberately post absurd fake stories designed to “poison” AI search models. In this case, members flooded the internet with fabricated claims that JD Vance had died of rabies before Donald Trump supposedly succumbed to the same disease, even creating fake news articles and spoofing local news websites to reinforce the narrative.
Duck.ai wasn’t the only casualty. Futurism also found that Brave Search’s AI repeated similar false claims before later correcting itself. DuckDuckGo, meanwhile, acknowledged the mistake on Reddit with a tongue-in-cheek response: “Ok, we got ducked on this one.” The company said the issue had been resolved and added that Search Assist had been “deliberately tricked,” promising improvements to better handle similar attacks in the future.
The report also notes that the fake story gained credibility because AI search cited a fabricated website posing as a legitimate local news outlet, which itself appeared to be generated using AI and stitched together from the same Reddit hoax. In other words, the AI wasn’t simply making things up. It was confidently repeating misinformation that had been deliberately planted across the web.
This is less about DuckDuckGo and more about the future of AI search
The funny thing is that this isn’t really a DuckDuckGo problem. It’s an AI search problem. Modern AI assistants increasingly rely on information gathered from across the web, and if enough fake content is published in enough places, those systems can begin treating fiction as fact.

That’s what makes this incident so concerning. We’ve spent years worrying about AI hallucinating answers out of thin air, but coordinated attempts to poison AI search could prove even more dangerous. If bad actors can manipulate what AI models “learn” simply by flooding the internet with convincing misinformation, then improving AI isn’t just about building smarter models anymore. It’s about building systems that know who, and what, they should trust.
