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Brave to end 'Strict' fingerprinting protection as it breaks websites
(www.bleepingcomputer.com)
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.
In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.
much thanks to @gary_host_laptop for the logo design :)
Whenever people tell me to use Brave, I know they fall for marketing very easily
Tim Pool uses Brave...
Say no more 🤮
Le lion shills? I am unfamiliar with this.
Never used 4chan. Thanks for explaining though!
Braves default fingerprinting protection is better than the one that librewolf uses, or at least it is according to the EFF.
I use it. I don't get marketing because I use brave, which has a fucking indestructible adblocker. Like while everyone was panicking from the YouTube issues, I've never seen a single message to turn it off on YouTube. And there was a bunch of other things that users has reported, like slow videos, that brave just didn't have problems with.
Firefox with ublock origin and you will unironically have an near identical experience
ublock origin works fine for me on firefox. i use freetube (desktop client), but when i use the youtube website i don't have ad issues.
Brave is simply usable Chromium. On GrapheneOS it is not the most secure as it has its own Chromium engine which is not as hardened poorly.
On Linux it works well with hardened_malloc while Firefox straight up does not run. This is probably because Firefox has memory issues.
It sucks relying on Chromium as Firefoxes UX is top tier. I have no idea why normies are using Chromium Browsers, they all suck for UX, especially Chrome.
But on Android and Linux Chromium is very secure, while Firefox is at least questionable.
Brave sets very weird priorities though, they dont focus on many features people need and instead bloat everything with news or crypto stuff that doesnt even support Monero.