• @[email protected]
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      1083 months ago

      Careful, there are some edgy people out there who don’t want to use more than one browser because Firefox doesn’t work with their cameras /s

      Meanwhile, I’ll still be using Firefox too

        • @[email protected]
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          583 months ago

          May be bad phrasing, but Firefox doesn’t support h.265 so there’s limitations with streaming video on some camera platforms and other sites.

        • @[email protected]
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          343 months ago

          People who have to use their browser for telehealth and virtual teller banking access.

          Sadly these are also things that require better security.

          • Cadeillac
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            63 months ago

            Yup. Firefox doesn’t work for me unfortunately, so I have to maintain Chrome on at least one device for these things

            • Optional
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              53 months ago

              Hey, member when you always had to have IE for one of “those” sites and it was basically just an awful browser everyone was forced to have like as a legal requirement or something?

              Heh. IE. Then when you’d use it to download firefox it’d say “Nooooo! Wait! I’m teh Best Browser!!” Hahahahah

              IE. Ded.

              • Cadeillac
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                12 months ago

                That’s a good question. I don’t know that I can fully uninstall Chrome from my Tablet, only disable. Since I use it maybe a handful of times a month it isn’t a big deal to just use it for the session. I don’t feel the need to have another browser right now, but I appreciate you bringing that up

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          People who use Webex, zoom, etc for one use in try browser and don’t normally use those links. Happens at work when an outside vendor doesn’t use what we do.

        • @[email protected]
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          123 months ago

          I use MS teams for meetings every day at work, in Firefox, in Linux. It’s nice that even the camera works when I need it to.

        • @[email protected]
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          83 months ago

          I do this with Discord and Zoom as an alternative to installing their actual apps. 99% of the functionality is there anyway, and the 1% is stuff I don’t want anyway

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          It’s so frustratingly annoying. I primarily use Firefox, but switch to Chrome for specific Google services on my mobile. Once in a while, the search suggests I take a photo? Why?

    • @[email protected]
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      -503 months ago

      You say that like they didn’t just remove several other adblock extensions themselves

      • unalivejoy
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        353 months ago

        From what I’ve heard, they only “removed” uBlock Origin Lite. Normal uBO is still up.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        No they didn’t.

        They’re still there. Ublock origin is the god-tier adblock, and it’s still there. It’s even a Recommended by Mozilla extension.

        I know people on Lemmy often, for some reason, hate Mozilla more than Google or Microsoft, but Mozilla very much still caters to people who want to block ads, despite the disinformation on Lemmy.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          I don’t think Lemmy users hate Firefox. I feel like alot of it is either people who legitimately have whatever needs they have, fulfilled by chrome more than firefox, or…it’s fucking astroturfers/fanboys.

          Edit Addendum: Also, if anything, Lemmy users fucking love Firefox.

          • @[email protected]
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            43 months ago

            I don’t mean all Lemmy users. I mean a surprisingly large amount that non-stop hate on Mozilla and Firefox.

            I’ve even seen two users that hate Mozilla/Firefox so much that they wrote about it in their account bio, which I find crazy.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 months ago

              Mozilla have made a series of unpopular choices, especially their enabling of telemetry for advertisers that does nothing to benefit users.

              It is no surprise some people are vocally unhappy.

              • @[email protected]
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                3 months ago

                Private ads that make user tracking impossible absolutely benefits users, and the ad industry would be a lot less of a cancerous cesspit if it were the norm.

                It’s certainly been unpopular, but that’s more because most people on Lemmy don’t read past ragebait headlines and assume the worst.

                • @[email protected]
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                  13 months ago

                  It’s just another source of telemetry for advertisers and won’t stop any of the existing methods of tracking.

        • @[email protected]
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          13 months ago

          I think people don’t hate Mozilla, they want them to do better as there are not many options left if you care about privacy. It’d just be nice to not have to pick the lesser evil for once.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 months ago

            And they are doing better. Making ads private is a very good thing. They’re currently a privacy nightmare.

            • @[email protected]
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              3 months ago

              They are not making ads private, they are adding another tracking vector. This will not get rid of the other ones already there.

              • @[email protected]
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                No they weren’t. Clearly you don’t know how this system works.

                It is impossible to track anybody using this.

                You are getting angry at Mozilla for making something that enables privacy, then getting angry at them again because they aren’t dictators of the web who can control everybody’s and networks.

                • @[email protected]
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                  02 months ago

                  In their own words

                  PPA does not involve sending information about your browsing activities to anyone. This includes Mozilla and our DAP partner (ISRG). Advertisers only receive aggregate information that answers basic questions about the effectiveness of their advertising.

                  So, let’s say I trust in everything they are saying, which is the absolute best case scenario, then they have done nothing for privacy, because the whole premise that ad networks only care about ex-post measuring the effectiveness of their ads is false. They could have done that long before.

                  They want to know who you are and what you do so they can sort you in categories and show you specific ads based on those. That’s the service ad networks sell to advertisers. So, tracking as usual will continue.

      • @[email protected]
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        193 months ago

        The one they removed isn’t relevant until Firefox also removes manifest V2 which they have no plans for.

        • Draconic NEO
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          183 months ago

          Firefox has a different manifest v3 that still retains webrequest functionality, so even when they do switch over it’ll be fine.

      • GHiLA
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        103 months ago

        shrugs in books

        They have no idea how stubborn I am.

  • @[email protected]
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    1253 months ago

    What could go wrong when you let an ad company dictate the browser standards/rules.

    I know we have Firefox and some forks like librewolf, but percentage wise it feels like a lost battle ( even if I am on Firefox ).

    If only people switched en masse to Firefox for the ad blocker. Wouldn’t that be something… One big collective FU to Google.

    Oh well. One can dream I guess.

    • @[email protected]
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      303 months ago

      The average Joe or Jane have no idea about ad blocking possibilities. They think ads are just the normal price you pay for surfing the web.

      I have even shown people the difference between their browsing experience and mine, and still they can’t be arsed to install an ad-blocker.

      But then again, they use tiktok and Instagram and all the other brain-numbing shit out there.

      • Corgana
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        73 months ago

        The average Joe or Jane have no idea about ad blocking possibilities. They think ads are just the normal price you pay for surfing the web.

        Actually about a third of all users have an adblocker installed. Adblocking has been mainstream for a while, no doubt why Google finally stopped pretending they were OK with it.

        • downhomechunk
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          73 months ago

          My wife didn’t even notice when I turned on the pi-hole. She also told me she thinks there’s a virus on her phone.

          • Corgana
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            3 months ago

            I wouldn’t put a lot of faith in the intelligence of a woman who would marry a Lemmy user.

            • downhomechunk
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              12 months ago

              Tbf, I wasn’t a leemy user when we met. But I agree. She has terrible taste in men.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 months ago

        I personally wouldn’t mind ads, if they weren’t too obtuse and/or malware ridden.

        I often turn off the adblocker for independent news sites, as theirs are less obtuse and are vetted better than just running an AI to detect nudity and/or slurs.

        • @[email protected]
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          93 months ago

          By all means bring back the banner and side ads that are just one banner and a couple of side ads. Breaking every paragraph up by two more ads is just a miserable experience. Have you tried to look up a recipe lately? Trying to find a recipe without an ad blocker pisses me off and off that I just give up on the recipe. Even though I know it’s on the page, between the 5,000 word essay trying to convey their nostalgia for the recipe and the 27 different ads that break that 5,000 word essay into 25 pages, I’d rather DDOS them then get the recipe from them.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 months ago

        They think ads are just the normal price you pay for surfing the web.

        Which is great, offsets us who do use adblocks. It would be awful if majority of users would use adblocks.

    • @[email protected]
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      113 months ago

      There comes a point where one realizes that those around you cannot be relied upon to leverage solutions. Psychopaths get ahead because they’re willing to play dirty. So much of the world can be summed up as large swaths of population being induced to behave or think certain ways by psychopathic manipulators.

      • @[email protected]
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        33 months ago

        Data serves a great role in this. It’s a currency of control.

        Political, social, etc.

        Which is why privacy is so goddamn important.

  • @[email protected]
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    993 months ago

    We’ve known this was coming for a while now . . . but I suppose not everyone reads tech news.

    • @[email protected]
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      83 months ago

      I mean… Even if everyone knows it’s coming, you still need to have notice when it actually happens right?

  • @[email protected]
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    813 months ago

    I used to recommend uBlock as a no-brainer, now folks really need to change towards a better browser.

    • @[email protected]
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      333 months ago

      Or get network wide blocking. Doesn’t prevent everything but it does prevent most ads. Makes the internet tolerable at least.

              • @[email protected]
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                63 months ago

                Wouldn’t a company VPN bypass all that even though you are using your own internet connection to connect to the outside world?

                • @[email protected]
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                  33 months ago

                  Maybe, I guess I don’t know enough to answer that. I do know that being on a company VPN isn’t always a requirement, though.

                  Either way, I’m not trying to argue for one approach to ad blocking over another as a one-size-fits-all solution, I just wanted to point out that it’s possible to have more control over the network than the computer in some cases.

                • @[email protected]
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                  23 months ago

                  Typically yes, assuming that the company VPN sets DNS to a set of company DNS servers. That is how my company’s works and several others I’ve worked for in the past.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            sadly, agreed. mindshare leads to adoption, tho - so putting Firefox in front of more faces is always a positive. after all, its how google dominates.

          • @[email protected]
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            73 months ago

            Depends on how lax the IT department is when it comes to random executables. I was able to move the firefox installer to the appdata root, and run a non-admin install to my user profile.

      • @[email protected]
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        63 months ago

        Something like NextDNS as a no-brainer? It works but hits the limit of the free tier if people use it beyond their phone.

        • nfh
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          43 months ago

          PiHole and a TailScale exit node so you can use it for DNS whether or not you’re on your home network.

          • @[email protected]
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            33 months ago

            Or a variation of this is TailScale configured to use NextDNS and a TS exit node. That’s for anyone who doesn’t want to maintain a PiHole. I’ve done both. Personal choice.

      • datendefekt
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        23 months ago

        Pihole is good for a private network, but you can forget it in a work setting, especially corporate networks.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 months ago

        I recommended pihole to my senior webdeveloper. She didn’t know about it and was blown away by the concept. She installed it immediately and is now living happily ad free.

  • Kokesh
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    633 months ago

    And what? If someone can live with ads, they can stay. Otherwise anyone can install Firefox. I was all-in Google since the beginning of Gmail. And switching to Firefox was completely painless. Everything works the same, times of website incompatibility are long gone.

    • @[email protected]
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      813 months ago

      Because Google is trying to turn the internet into a walled garden where only people with Chrome can visit the majority of websites.

      • @[email protected]
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        203 months ago

        I’ve been been a full time Firefox user for three years now. Haven’t experience a single problem like that. Haven’t really experienced any problem at all to be honest

        • @[email protected]
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          303 months ago

          Unfortunately that has not been the case for me. Some sites for buying concert tickets don’t seem to like Firefox.

          I’ve had problems with several Microsoft sites we use internally for work ever since Edge went to Chrome.

          It’s not Firefox’s fault. Mozilla is abiding by web standards.

          • Ghoelian
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            283 months ago

            If you find any websites that don’t work with firefox, you should report them to Mozilla. Firefox has a list of known bad websites, and has fixes for them, usually just a user agent override.

        • @[email protected]
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          73 months ago

          Your past experiences with Firefox are irrelevant because we’re talking about the future.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            I know. My experience with Chrome used to be good too. And we all know what’s up now.

            If Firefox fucks up, I’m fine with abandoning ship and moving on to the next thing. I’m not sure what that would be, but I’m sure I’ll figure that out once we get there.

            • @[email protected]
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              143 months ago

              That’s the problem. Google is working so that there’s not going to be a next thing.

              • @[email protected]
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                43 months ago

                That is concerning, but Internet Explorer used to be the only option too. Of course things are different now, but I have faith (for lack of anything else).

                • @[email protected]
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                  13 months ago

                  That was for a different reason, though. That was Microsoft forcing you to use their software on something you owned. A website can say, “you have to use chrome to access our site,” and that’s not antitrust behavior on the part of Google.

              • @[email protected]
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                13 months ago

                There always is a next thing. It’s called Gemini and it has the problem of guys like Google fixed by having a non-extensible standard.

                I’m not joking, too - sometimes even wide masses become practical and just want “no bullshit” Internet publishing. Which Gemini delivers.

                But - would be interesting to have something like Gemini, but serverless.

            • @[email protected]
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              3 months ago

              Thats the thing.

              There is basically no alternative. Firefox exists on the mercy of google which is its biggest donor.

              There are very few attempts at a truly open source browser and neither can tackle the biggest problem, which is google pushing websites to adopt their standards, weaponizing ad income to guarantee compliance.

              Currently more then 80% of internet users have a chromium browser while websites creation for many entities is often outsourced out of lack of own IT knowledge. When firefox dies there will be no economic insensitive to build sites accessible by anything but chromium.

              Low key i wish this fires back into anarchy. I hate the corporate web and the only sites i like to see are those free of economic insensitive and all in on an ethical free digital world.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          try changing your user-agent to mock chrome in Firefox while you visit YouTube.

          you should see a drastic difference in UX.

          • @[email protected]
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            23 months ago

            I tried YouTube in Chrome on desktop (for about 2 minutes) and I didn’t notice any difference. I’ll just keep using NewPipe on my phone though.

            • @[email protected]
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              33 months ago

              it takes a whole 10 extra seconds for the interface to be usable for me in Firefox. but not when I spoof the user-agent as chrome.

              at least that’s how it was about 4 months ago.

          • @[email protected]
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            33 months ago

            NewPipe exclusively. YouTube has been unusable long before I fully moved back to FireFox.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 months ago

              Smart choice. YouTube has been fucking Firefox users for a while now. Implementing stuff like a 5s wait to load videos.

    • @[email protected]
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      193 months ago

      What if websites decide that chrome users earn much more ad revenue and start forcing users to switch with those “This website only supports Chrome” error messages? What if this practice gets popular? I’m sure there are ways to get around it, but the average users who bothered switching to Firefox at all, will just conclude that anything except chrome has a bad browsing experience.

          • @[email protected]
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            23 months ago

            It’s all fun and games till they check for web USB support. They don’t need to actually use web USB but it’s a telltale sign that you’re not on Chrome.

            • @[email protected]
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              43 months ago

              A plugin could very easily have Firefox claim to support WebUSB, but return no devices or junk devices. Some of the anti-fingerprinting add-ons already do, iirc.

              • @[email protected]
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                23 months ago

                You get my point though, all they need to do is start supporting a feature that’s not easy to spoof.

                The real defense against this is for people to refuse to use Chrome. It’s not the tail that wags the dog, Make The Firefox user base so big the developers can’t ignore it. Basically IE all over again

                • @[email protected]
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                  33 months ago

                  I agree with your conclusion, but as long as they’re offering data up for download to your machine, they really can’t control how you access it or what application you use for it. That doesn’t mean it’ll be easy, but even if it requires reverse-engineering some website DRM, somebody’s going to do it. And if Chromium remains FOSS, it won’t even be terribly difficult.

                  Remember, they tried to defeat ad blockers on YouTube, and they gave up because it wasn’t worth it. uBO was updating to block their attempts within hours. They’ve tested inserting the ads in the video stream, but that’s probably also not going to last for long.

                  They’re trying to assert an ownership over the Web; and yes, the best way to defeat it is to build a strong and united resistance against it. But even if we don’t, there are ways to quietly refuse to comply.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 months ago

        Then apple would whip out their giant throbbing cock and smack them with it because they want people using safari.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 months ago

        i never understood how those messages work? like how would using firefox ruin your website? or how they even detect firefox in the first place lmfao

        • @[email protected]
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          43 months ago

          They can in theory make tricks showing that you are using an ad blocker or a specific browser. Even if you set Chrome’s user agent in Firefox.

          I personally wouldn’t make such effort to use such websites then.

        • Rolling Resistance
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          13 months ago

          Browsers have user-agent identifiers, websites can see what browser and what version you use.

          They are mostly used to run browser-dependent code to avoid some things breaking in some browsers.

    • @[email protected]
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      143 months ago

      times of website incompatibility are long gone

      I wish I could agree with that. Hell, I have to use Chrome to download my phone bill from Virgin, and a couple of others don’t work.

      And don’t get me wrong, I’m not blaming FF. It’s these lazy web developers that only target Chrome. I’m sure Safari users get the same shit experience.

      • Kokesh
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        23 months ago

        I’ve cried also in dev a lot in the past, but mostly don’t cry so much anymore

    • @[email protected]
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      53 months ago

      Issue is, a lot of people think the only browser in existence is “google”. I even had people looking me at funny for having an e-mail address ending in outlook.com rather than the usual gmail.com, and not because of some anti-MS sentiment, but because they thought e-mail was invented by Google, hance the name “gmail”.

      • @[email protected]
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        73 months ago

        but because they thought e-mail was invented by Google, hance the name “gmail”.

        Life is scary.

    • lazynooblet
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      43 months ago

      I really wish Firefox implemented easily switchable browser profiles. I am use Firefox mainly but for work I’ll still use edge so I can use this feature.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        I don’t know exactly what part of a separate profile you are after, so this may not be a 100% substitute, but I found container tabs in Firefox to work quite well (with some extensions to improve UX). It’s still the same profile though, so passwords and history are shared.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      some people dont want firefox bcs its kinda slower then chromium based tbh but it aint bad am not saying firefox is bad

    • @[email protected]
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      13 months ago

      Everything works the same, times of website incompatibility are long gone.

      Not completely true. It’s mostly true. I’ve daily driven Firefox for years, and the number of websites I’ve crossed that wouldn’t function in it correctly but would work just fine in Chrome was very slim… but not zero. Definitely not comparable to the complete shitshow of the 90’s and 00’s. That’s true. But it’s not a completely solved problem.

      And with Mozilla’s leadership practically looking for footguns to play with combined with the threat of Google’s sugar daddy checks drying up soon due to the antitrust suit (how utterly ironic that busting up the monopoly would actually harm the only competition…), that gap can get much worse in very little time if resources to keep full time devs paid disappear.

  • @[email protected]
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    613 months ago

    Maybe we’re thinking about this wrong. Maybe we should all start running plugins that just load whatever ads that show up in the background hundreds of times without showing them to us. Every viewer is thousands upon thousands of impressions and click through rates become absolutely miserable. We can make the ads worthless or maybe even make them cost a significant amount of money to host.

      • ArchRecord
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        93 months ago

        It’s mildly effective in the sense that it will decimate click-through rates, but if enough people did it, they would start filtering by IP, and you’d need to change how many ads it clicks on so it looks more human.

        It also still gives advertisers your data, since it still has to load the ads on your system to click them, so it’s not as privacy-preserving as a full-on adblocker that outright blocks every advertisement and tracker related network request in the first place.

        • JackbyDev
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          33 months ago

          Yeah, I don’t want to use it because I don’t want them to get some weird over fitted model of my behavior.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 months ago

      I had an add blocker on phone thats worked that way (AdAway). It would just redirect adds into some folder and apps would be satisfied.

      • William
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        12 months ago

        Because this is likely to drive a lot of people to try switching. And they’re the type of people who try to convince other people to switch, too. Techies, etc.

        When forced with trying to keep family safe from abusive and/or manipulative ads, this is a pretty hot topic. Plenty of people tell their family what browser to use and even set it up for them with ad blockers, etc.

        I’ve recently had some experiences that tell me my parents are at a vulnerable age and can’t fully protect themselves, so it’s pretty important to have control of this.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 months ago

          A slight misunderstanding, perhaps. I meant why should Google try, as right now Firefox is no threat to them.

          • William
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            12 months ago

            They’ve been quietly preventing Firefox from becoming a threat for a long time. There are constant little things that just mysteriously don’t work as well on Firefox, for no reason. People have changed the user agent and found that it works just like on Chrome with Chrome’s agent. Youtube was doing it for a while, and reviews on the search are another instance. I was at the Dentist’s and they were asking for a Google review, but I couldn’t find the spot to leave it. I switched to Chrome and it was magically right where it was supposed to be.

            So they already think Firefox could be a threat, and preventing ad-block is going to make it a bigger threat.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      So you will need to have a backup browser to use only Google services and everything but Google search blocked in ff

      • Its not google services i worry about ive pretty much degoogled everything i can. Its the google bits so deeply embedded into almost every website across the internet. If they implemented some tpm bs into chrome that somehow Verity’s itself with tpm and google servers before it loads anything then that instantly makes a majority of websites juat not work on ff with no fixes backdoors or bypasses. They will try, we have little hope in stopping it, and most people wont even notice let alone give a fuck.

    • Avieshek
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      403 months ago

      May I interest you in browsers based on FireFox?

        • stinerman [Ohio]
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          153 months ago

          Someone who repackages/patches free software has different incentives than upstream. So generally speaking, derivative browsers are more privacy friendly, have better features, etc.

          That’s not to say that upstream isn’t important. It absolutely is! It’s just that derivatives are generally better.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 months ago

            I’ve looked at one or two variants but how do I trust them? They are also forked from some previous version so presumably somewhat out of date? And then also it’s not clear what they are doing what firefox isn’t.

            • @[email protected]
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              2 months ago

              Trust is a tough problem when you go deep enough down the IT security rabbit hole. I personally trust software more when it has a public github you can look at and see exactly whats being worked on or added to code base. Generally forks of browsers like Firefox or Chromium like to stay up to date and so are updated within a few days of the new browser release if not shorter. There are some older browsers like palemoon that do their own thing independent of current firefox releases but in general most forks you would want to use are regularly updated and fast.

              I like Librewolf. Their website is pretty clear about the differences in goals. Firefox by default has a lot of its security features disabled so to not break website compatability. Not just in regular settings either but the real nitty gritty stuff in the about:config section. Firefox also has sponsorship stuff activated by default so mozilla makes some money. Librewolf has more of these security features enabled and rips the sponsorship stuff out. It also comes preinstalled with UBO.

              You can go even further beyond with advanced security profiles like arkenfox’s user.js. Remember though theres a trade off you are making between security and convinence. The more locked down your browser the more things are gonna break or more personal inconvinence youll have to deal with. Cookies that last multiple sessions suck for security but damn logging in over and over and over gets annoying. So I’ve been there, i’ve done that. The pain in the ass that comes from a super locked down browser wasn’t worth it for my threat model.

              • @[email protected]
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                12 months ago

                Oh I didn’t even mean trust as in maliciousness, and not even as in “do they know their shit” but do they have the time and money to do things right? And also do I have time to read and learn what all this is supposed to mean?

                And the inconvenience with VPNs alone… What I really want is a kind of universal addon or browser project that just “cleans up most websites”. So many websites have bad behavior now and anti-features. I just want to read an article not get a slide in or blinky thing. Internet is becoming unusable even before the dead internet thing. Ironically for such a “website cleanup” you’d probably want advanced AI so Mozilla is probably on the right track.

                • @[email protected]
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                  22 months ago

                  I see what you mean. The best defense against website crap at the moment is Ublock Origin addon which is why chrome killing it was such a big deal for people. A tool I really like to use when browsing online articles to cut out crap is newswaffle. It gets all the text of the article while cutting out everything else. Its open source and I have had email conversations with the dude who made it hes a great guy. I recommend you check it out if that sounds like something you want in your life.

              • JackbyDev
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                12 months ago

                Nothing that warrants trying to explain to someone what alternatives to it are or bike shedding about which is the best.

  • @[email protected]
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    243 months ago

    Hopefully wikipedia recognizes this as the official Canary in the Chrome mine. I was first impressed with chrome book because of seeing them used for education, getting my own laptop during school would’ve been mindblowing to kid me. I was unimpressed with the strangulation process of the OS but again shocked when they added a linux boot mode. There needs to be better alternatives by now, I would be ok with an OS developed by the department of education in conjunction with higher educational institutions. Could have a decent non-profit approach to a browser and ad blockers could legitimately be built in as a “protect the children” aim of approach.

    • @[email protected]
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      103 months ago

      I take it you’ve never been involved in such an endeavor? What you propose would take a decade a minimum due to the sheer number of nested advisory committees that would be required for those groups to interface. Better a non-profit group begins the work and then solicits these group’s input at the design stage.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 months ago

        I think super-apps are the way to go, only way to prevent one company from monopolizing click-stream data for advertising.

        some apps already do this and their users don’t suffer from the same issue (granted, they have different issues)

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      Think of it as an iceberg & Chrome users as a boat.

      Assuming no changes, this is landing in Chrome Canary now, so we’re watching the Chrome Canary boat hit the iceberg. The Chrome Beta boat is going to hit in a few weeks. Finally the Chrome Stable boat is scheduled to hit in mid November.

      Now Google may choose to hold back actually enabling this flag immediately. It wouldn’t be the first delay. But likely in mid November is when all the posts will start to appear of people asking where their ad blocker went.

      (Although I’m guessing it actually is delayed until after the holidays and in the new year, but that’s just wild speculation.)

    • @[email protected]
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      563 months ago

      Yes. There’s only 3 major browsers. Chromium (Chrome), Firefox, WebKit (Safari). Nearly every other webbrowser is a fork of one of these, most are forks of Chromium, including Opera. As such, most webbrowsers will be affected by the change.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          Chrome browser = chromium plus Google

          Samsung browser = chromium plus garbage

          Brave browser = chromium plus crypto and homophobia

            • @[email protected]
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              3 months ago

              I don’t think it should’ve been opt-out, but Mozilla’s ad metrics development is very much the direction ads on the web should go in. It is impossible to determine who you are from the data. They’ve truly done a good job on creating an ad model that’s privacy friendly, and would be a material improvement to the web.

              It’s a way to still have ad revenue funding the content we all consume, while also still maintaining privacy. It’s a good thing. It’s just the opt-out aspect for existing installs that’s bad.

              That said, I’m personally a proponent of just using adblock lol

              • TerkErJerbs
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                23 months ago

                I also use adblocking at multiple levels so it wasn’t a huge thing for me (been blocking Pocket and other bullshit for years at the dns and network levels) but I still feel like Mozilla witnessed Google going for broke with killing mv2 and inline ads on YouTube and decided wellll our existing users probably wouldn’t notice or care if we slipped in an opt-out fuckery… But we did. Immediately.

                For any browser trying to sell itself as “the only privacy browser on the market” this was a dumb fucking move by any metric. Like why not just openly admit we’re going with the Brave browser model?

              • TerkErJerbs
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                43 months ago

                No it’s not. But if we’re hoping Firefox will be better in some way we’d expect more from them. Wouldn’t we?

          • @[email protected]
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            13 months ago

            Brave browser = chromium plus crypto and homophobia

            the crypto stuff can be opt out tho

        • @[email protected]
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          133 months ago

          DuckDuckGo’s webbrowser is somewhat unique, in the sense that it isn’t its own browser at all. It’s a “WebView”, using the OS built-in webbrowser with a coat of paint.

          This means it’s Blink/Chromium on Android and Windows, and WebKit on iOS and macOS.

        • Chloé 🥕
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          3 months ago

          depends on the OS!

          DuckDuckGo uses the default rendering engine of whatever OS you use it on, so webkit (also used by safari) on macOS and iOS and blink (also used by edge and chrome) on windows and android

          even if it uses the same rendering engine on some platforms, it’s not based on chromium, so it’s not a chromium browser

      • Chloé 🥕
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        43 months ago

        what does the browser being Chinese have to do with anything?

        • DarkThoughts
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          13 months ago

          You really don’t see a problem installing software from an authoritarian regime that spies on basically everyone and everything and has 0 privacy protection?

          • Chloé 🥕
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            3 months ago

            the chinese government isn’t behind every software that’s made in china lol

            like yea, opera is spyware, but so are chrome, safari and edge, and none of these are made in china

            • DarkThoughts
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              43 months ago

              If you think the Chinese regime isn’t using Opera as a potential attack vector then that’s just naive. Browsers are very critical pieces of software infrastructure.

              • Chloé 🥕
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                13 months ago

                opera sure, but at that point, any proprietary software can be used as an attack vector by the government of the country the software is made in, that’s not specific to china

                i don’t see why chrome or safari should be considered more trustworthy than opera just because they aren’t made in china

                • DarkThoughts
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                  03 months ago

                  You really don’t see the difference between a flawed democracy with laws and regulations and an authoritarian regime? Tankie talk much?

    • Engywuck
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      33 months ago

      Not this with built-in adblockers, despite someone’s wishes.