I use it because it has a built in adblocker, and well it just works.

There is some crypto bullfuck and AI shit you can easily opt out off, and some talk about some CEO making homophobic comments.

  • Lorfan@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I like brave browser and use it but I lost all my crypto from watching ads then they discontinued the program. I don’t know why they did that because it was a great idea.

  • KaChilde@sh.itjust.works
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    21 hours ago

    There is some crypto bullfuck and AI shit you can easily opt out off, and some talk about some CEO making homophobic comments.

    I feel like you know the reasons already then.

    If having to install an adblocker is the biggest hurdle that means you are willing to put up with the rest of the BS, that’s your choice.

    I’d rather take 40 seconds to install a adblocker on a different browser and not support shit CEOs or software that comes loaded with crypto AI shit, but that’s just me.

  • headset@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Ahh yes. Brave the bloated browser with very dodgy behaviour. You get a chrome fork with crypto shit, leaky VPN, ridiculously bad search, and a full blown ad engine that hijacks your notifications and tracks you in an ‘anonymized’ way. FUCK.THAT.SHIT.

    • Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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      23 hours ago

      Not to be antagonistic, but

      • chrome fork - much of the browser world is this
      • crypto shit - opt in not mandatory
      • leaky VPN - opt in not mandatory
      • bad search - opt in not mandatory
      • ad engine - opt in not mandatory

      So, basically, it’s a chrome fork, and some people prefer chrome based browsers, so it’s purely preference?

      • Bahnd Rollard@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        The main issues a lot of the FF purists on this site take with Brave is-

        1. its a chrome fork, which is a hard stop for them, and thats a good enough reason alone to avoid a product given how anti-corporate and anti-google the residents of this site are.

        2. the systems in the opt-in list are still part of the application. There is an anxiety that the developer may decide at a future time that those features are not opt-in/enabled by default after an update.

        So the natural response is to advocate for browsers that simply do not have those features and are open-source so that users can verify rather than trust the dev team to not put features like that in the product. Or rigoursly vet every update installed on your system to prevent that stuff from being installrd in an update, which is not viable for most people… (Run apt update/upgrade and manually approve every package change, we will see you in a few days).

  • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Because crypto bro behaviour and I can install ublock in my firefox browser in both android and desktop.

    What makes/does Brave better?

    • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      All those browser extensions you need to make Firefox private ends up fingerprinting you. Brave has all of that by default, so sites of sites can’t easily differentiate you from other Brave users.

      Also, Firefox still doesn’t have tab groups on mobile. Chromium has had that feature for years and Firefox hasn’t bothered to keep up at all. That’s a non-starter for me

      • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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        8 hours ago

        Why would you want tab groups on mobile? There is no real estate available to bother.

        Also, on mobile, Firefox focus is the best general purpose browser when you are just looking up things. Adblock is built in, all cookies are dropped on close.

      • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        Fingerprinting

        Not important to me. But understandable

        tab groups

        I actively disable that on everything I use it with (even in the about:config flag)

  • nocturne@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    @cannedtuna@lemmy.world is the author of everything that follows:

    This is a very well written an thorough article and I highly recommend reading it. If you don’t want to however, here is a summary of the key points:

    Edit: corrected a mistake noted below.

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      You forgot

      • 1995 : Brendan Eich creates JavaScript over two weeks at netscape, ruining the internet forever by getting there first with a shoddy piece of shit language instead of something sensical.
      • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Later, that same piece of shit language will be used as an easy and quick way to develop applications running in neutered Chromium instances, that lead to your mouse driver software needing 500+MB of RAM all the time. At least it’s portable, when the developers actually decide to export to Linux, and not just Windows and Mac (looking at you, Logitech!), and at worst have regular OS checks in the code just in case someone decides to take the code out of the Chromium instance.

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    13 hours ago

    nothing

    that’s why Nobara and Zorin, 2 well respected linux distros, now use it as their default browser

    i wish firefox had kept up with everyone else technically but they didn’t, that’s why it almost disappeared. brave is the best chromium fork and the best browser generally imo

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    1 day ago

    Besides all the reasons everyone else has already provided in this thread, a browser containing as you so colourfully put it “crypto bullfuck and AI shit” isn’t something I want to use.

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    2 days ago

    It’s a crypto scam wrapped in a protection racket, built by an incompetent misogynist asshole on a base that supports Google’s hegemony over web standards.

    • shameless@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I stopped using Brave years ago but this should be the biggest motivator to get away from the browser. The thought of what Peter Thiel is probably getting from that deal is awful.

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    For me it boils down to it pretending to be different from Chrome while using the same rendering engine, thus keeping more power at Google.

    As someone who lived through the time when IE was dominant and seeing the web stagnate until Mozilla released Firefox and began competing with new features and better speed, I never want to go back to a world with just one main rendering engine, we are sadly there again with Blink, but I am not going to support it.

    • zeca@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      I tried floorp a while ago, but it felt a bit too clumsy and unstable. Has it gotten any better?

      • daggermoon@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I haven’t had any problems with it. If you’re on Linux, there’s a fork of it called Firedragon. It’s a bit more stripped down with additional patches for privacy and security.

  • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Also, in addition to what others said, Brave has been involved in some shady stuff like ad substitution/injection. See:

    https://thelibre.news/no-really-dont-use-brave/

    Similarly enough, Brendan Eich’s feed also contains some worrying content, in my opinion. Ranging from, again, retweeting right-wing activists, to weird Republican propaganda. He claims to be independent and not a Republican, but this does not make me any less worried about the type of ideas he follows.

    But yeah, if you are a big fan of AI and crypto, and are okay with having advertisements in the user interface out of the box, are okay with past attempts to steal money from websites and collect donations towards people who wouldn’t necessarily even receive it, plus you can put up with occasional privacy mistakes… use Brave!