this post was submitted on 09 Oct 2023
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Privacy
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Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
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I really like Brave on my Android phone, with the build-in ad-blocking it's a really nice experience. Firefox on Android sucks imo, but I do use Firefox on my laptop as my primary browser.
If you have an android phone you could use something like Mull.
Isn't mullvad browser just yet another Firefox flavor?
Mull, not Mullvad Browser. But yes. (They are two separate things)
Why doesnt Mull completely clear out/remove Google Safe Browsing? There's 20 settings still in about:config that still have google domains and URLs. I don't want any part of Google touching my browser.
On a personal gripe, my complaints about Mull (or any FF Android app) are UX/UI related. No custom homepage (important to me), and the alternative "Shortcuts" on the home screen keep adding every site I visit. And while I'm at it, Mull's icon is ugly. It certainly doesnt need to splash screen the ugly logo every time you open it.
I can't really answer that question, but you can always get rid of them manually. As I've said in a previous post, the mobile market is just lacking privacy options in general.
I'm not the guy to just go deleting settings without knowing exactly what will change. Deleting or changing the wrong thing could break anything. As far as UI, I really couldn't begin to know where to start.
That's a big part of this whole argument at it's base, really. End users don't always know how to make changes in config files, nor should they need to. The ideal browser comes set up and ready to go, without "don't forget to change x, y, and z. Don't forget to download this add-on." Etc.
Yes, ideally browsers would be privacy-centric by default, but they aren't. I assume that in this community people are okay with having to mess with settings to have more privacy.
I agree. Sadly, adoption doesn't come from people already doing the tech thing. It comes from making privacy and security E.A.S.Y.