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You can do either. Out of all Chromium-based browsers, Brave seems to be the only open-source, the most secure and transparent browser with a lot of development capacity.

I currently only use Brave and Firefox on all my devices. Never liked the BAT crap Brave has built-in, but you can disable it and move on.




> transparent browser

previously: Brave’s browser has been autocompleting websites with referral codes [2y ago, 57 point, 32 comments]

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23441605


I am aware of this, please note the aspect of relativity when it comes to comparing with all the other chromium-based browsers.


(2y ago)

The change was transparent, the response was transparent, and it was reversed immediately.

You do know that FireFox gets paid for Google search referrals to this day right?

In comparison this was responded to and resolved 2 years ago.


>You do know that FireFox gets paid for Google search referrals to this day right?

Messing with referral codes to websites is not even remotely in the same ballpark as being paid for searches from the default search provider. It's asinine to compare them.


Unless you are repeating the lie that we "hijacked links", the binance.{us,com} refcode bug arose from search bar code that does exactly the same kind of keywords-into-search-box client refcoding that Firefox uses to get paid by Google.

https://twitter.com/BrendanEich/status/1273327455105773568


Yes, it's a lot worse to depend on revenue from your supposed competitor.

It may even hinder your motivation to build a browser that focuses on the user, and more to appease the person paying the bills (Google).

In comparison to a change that was in the browser for a day or so 2 years ago, yeah that's an asinine comparison alright.


As opposed to building your entire product on your competitor's codebase? That seems far more dangerous to me - at least Mozilla can make a deal with a different search provider (and they have, though I think it was kinda rough)


Google Search is not a competitor to Mozilla Firefox.


Are you serious.


This thread is so surreal, way below normal HN standards, people blindly yelling their own truths, like we are discussing ie Trump.

And yes you seems to be one hell of a biased user, very hard to agree with you.

Why can't there be 2 alternatives to default Chrome, with their own strengths and weaknesses?

I personally prefer Firefox who is completely independent on code changes on chromium core code (but getting Google's money in same vein as ie Apple is) - once some privacy-removing code change is baked into whole Chromium codebase, Brave's main selling point is gone. But I respect them for offering the best-available solution on Chrome-inclined users.


It's a proxy war for Brandon Eich's political beliefs. Plus a few advertising webmasters thrown in who are really bent out of shape about an adblocker being enabled by default.

BTW I use firefox and voted for those things Eich is against. Not that it should even matter, but it does. That's what this whole flamewar of a comment page is actually about.


People hate Eich and hate crypto, so they get bent out of shape. I don't mind the dislike, but the blatant lies and low information posting gets tiresome.


>but you can disable it and move on.

YOU and I can.

For an organization it has to be GPO mass disabled.

Does Brave support GPO in AD/Admin templates in intune?


Rewards are off by default. We support GPO for disabling torproxy.dll, IPFS, rewards ability to be enabled, and the self-custody multi-blockchain wallet. Global shields GPO control coming soon.

https://support.brave.com/hc/en-us/articles/360039248271-Gro...


Wow, interesting. Thank you. May look into this if users are installing Brave, or to use it for deployment.


You mean except for Chromium as well. All this talk about Manifest v3 which has already resolved most issues and delayed launch to finish addressing the rest literally provides more privacy than the approach before. Whether you want to make it easier for malicious extensions to spy on you is a different story, however I'd imagine that there are other filtering mechanisms outside the browser if you want to give adblockers more control.


> but you can disable it and move on

BAT is disabled by default.




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