this post was submitted on 07 Mar 2024
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Privacy
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I'm skeptical of any supposed privacy advocate that refuses to recommend Brave. It's no Tor Browser but in my own experience and tests, it consistently wins over just about everything else outside of Tor Browser.
Anyways, it recently added a forgetful browsing feature. What I do is have that toggled on by default, turning it off on individual sites that I want to keep logged in. Ultimately, this is better for privacy AND security, since it'd limit the damage of a token stealer.
Another option might be Librewolf if you absolutely can't handle a Chromium-based browser (I also take issue with that approach but that's a different topic for a different day). Firefox but more private than default. Waterfox is also an okay option nowadays, since they're now independent from the hostile takeover that they dealt with for a while.
Overall, for my own setup, I use Brave for ~70% of my browsing, with the remaining 30% split between hardened Firefox (with BetterFox) at 20%, Librewolf at 8% and Mullvad at 2%. I only use Tor Browser once in a blue moon for sensitive subjects that could financially impact me, like medical sites, insurance research and so forth.
There are a significant number of people who refuse to support Brave due to its CEOs support for anti-lgbt legislation and donations: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brendan_Eich
> tests
Are you talking about the man paid by Brave who chose the tests that say Brave is best? ๐ค
No, I'm talking about running it through test sites. No other browser outside of the Tor Browser is able to pass fingerprinting tests as consistently as Brave, in my experience.
Covermytracks makes never Brave look better than, say Librewolf, because Brave randomizes fingerprinting info while other browsers try to thwart fingerprinting by all looking the same.
I'd argue that randomization is more effective than making everyone look the same. It's less noticeable when the fingerprint is randomized.
You're probably right. I'd rather do it that way too.