Ladies and gentlemen! It’s true. Mozilla has finally done it.

Fortunately I have been dailying @zen_browser for the past 2 months and I recommend you do the same if you don’t want to migrate to ChromeTech. Otherwise use @[email protected].

The fox is dead. Long live the fox.

#mozilla #browser #privacy #technology

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  • Notesnook@fosstodon.orgOP
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    3 days ago

    @[email protected] @[email protected] I haven’t been able to find anything that bad in their TOS or Privacy Policy: https://brave.com/privacy/browser/

    In fact, Brave’s privacy policy is miles better than Firefox’s, and I don’t even like Brave that much.

    Your suggestion to turn all that crap off is pointless. Of course you might be able to switch some toggles but the company’s policy matters just like you wouldn’t trust Google even though they provide even better toggles for “privacy control”.

    TLDR: no tracking by default

    • Scott Lopez@noc.social
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      3 days ago

      @[email protected] @[email protected] I’ll have to do more digging on the legal docs.

      My point isn’t necessarily to disable everything. You need to understand which toggles actually have an effect. This info is widely known for Firefox (hence projects like arkenfox and Betterfox).

      It is troubling to see this sort of wording in a Mozilla policy.

      Nothing against Brave, btw. If you insist on sticking to Chromium, it’s not a bad option. I’d just hate to see Firefox lose more users, as it’s the only alt to Chromium.