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10 sats \ 1 reply \ @DeezSats 2 Oct 2022
Brave doing a lot of things right, shitcoining not being one of them.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @timechain 2 Oct 2022
I know, if they'd just switch over to lightning... and allow for withdrawls of said bitcoin to not be through KYC offramps.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @TheBTCManual 3 Oct 2022
If only brave could ditch the token, they are really doing a lot of great work that is needed so I guess I see it as the enemy of my enemy
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0 sats \ 2 replies \ @sommerfeld 2 Oct 2022
Brave is an over opinionated browser.
It does a lot of useful things out of the box that go beyond what a regular browser is required to do.
That is fine, there is space in the market for that. Power users will still prefer to use a bare bones blank slate browser and customize it to its needs.
The actual issues with brave are very simple:
- the shitcoinery
- the contribution to the browser engine monoculture
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1 sat \ 1 reply \ @DeezSats 3 Oct 2022
To get the privacy benefits with a barebones browser you would need to install a bunch of privacy plugins that you have to trust as well, and barring that, turning off cookies and JavaScript completely. And then you would still have to worry about different forms of fingerprinting that needs special code in the browser (or plugins) to defend against.
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132 sats \ 0 replies \ @EnormousPony 3 Oct 2022
On Firefox you have mostly the same basic no-ads no-tracks features of Brave browser while also enjoying the amount of addons Firefox has.
For example a basic Firefox setup, without even touching the user.js file, would have strict blocking by default and containers active plus few addons such as
- uBlock
- HTTPS everywhere
- CanvasBlocker
- Clear URLs
I mean both can do the same job but Firefox has the advantage of being a less bloated browser. This is especially true if you switch to LibreWolf which is firefox but harden on security and privacy
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