Here we go again
Here we go again
Here we go again
Not regretting my leap from Reddit to Lemmy at start of July. Firefox is my homeboy, been using it for decades.
Great to hear!
While the incoming end of support for manifest v2 is definitely a reason to switch, Google Web Integrity project is way much more concerning.
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/07/googles-web-integrity-api-sounds-like-drm-for-the-web/
Oh, damn!
Yep, just made the switch yesterday
Great!
Meanwhile at Google... Problem: People are flocking away from Chrome Solution: Implement webpage DRM
They keep doing it again and again.
Know they want to implement browser id checks.
https://vivaldi.com/blog/googles-new-dangerous-web-environment-integrity-spec/
Switched over to firefox a couple of days ago. The switch was actually very easy because I self-host as much as possible including bookmarks and passwords. Hardest part was finding a new speed dial extension that I liked.
I installed Firefox on all of my devices a couple of days ago when the new update of Chrome told me about some kind of browser based tracking for ads with the new update, I wish I'd taken a screenshot. I knew I was going to switch back to Firefox anyway with the web DRM they were planning on doing, but the new update pushed me to start changing over now.
If only Firefox could easily migrate my 97+ open tabs on chrome mobile...
Moving tabs is the hardest part of switching browsers!
It isn't. It's planning to make ad blockers use a crippled API like the one Safari has had for years now, but the timeline for that still hasn't been decided. https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/migrating/mv2-sunset/
thanks for info!
We need to go back to NCSA Mosaic.
I use Pulse btw.
Pulse
Cool, didn't know about it!
An experimental Firefox fork that enhances focus and increases work productivity due to its hyper minimalistic UI and built-in tools.
Remember people: Most alternative browsers are chormium under the hood! Not Firefox though :)
Differences please?
Building a browser is hard, and it's even harder when one of the maker of the most popular browser also operates several of the most popular websites. So most other browsers (Edge, Brave, Opera, and many more) are Chromium under the hood. This means that they often implement Google's preferred web functionality as opposed to the actual standard. If Google wants some feature going into the browser, most Chromium derivatives will follow their lead. Even though Brave has rejected many of Google's moves, I'd argue it still isn't enough since they still give Google some control over web standards.
The Internet needs to be impartial and fair in its design, this means it shouldn't be influenced by any one interest in particular. Google's indirect influence over nearly the whole browser market goes against the principle of an open web. The only way to fight effectively this is to use an independent browser, like Firefox.
well chrome = basically chromium So basically all changes from chrome carry over to chromium - and subsequently chromium-based browsers like brave opera edge etc
https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/blog/chrome-vs-firefox/