this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2025
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If you are keen on personal privacy, you might have come across Brave Browser. Brave is a Chromium-based browser that promises to deliver privacy with built-in ad-blocking and content-blocking protection. It also offers several quality-of-life features and services, like a VPN and Tor access. I mean, it's even listed on the reputable PrivacyTools website. Why am I telling you to steer clear of this browser, then?

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[–] [email protected] 464 points 1 week ago (17 children)

tldr:

  • CEO was forcefully ousted from Firefox for anti-LGBTQ views and donations.
  • Replaced existing ads on sites with Brave's own "private" ads.
  • Collected crypto on behalf of others without their knowledge or consent
  • Injected referral links into crypto websites to steal crypto revenue
  • Put ads in the new page tab
  • Shipped a TOR feature that leaked DNS
  • Doesn't disclose the ID of their search engine crawler via useragent
  • Removed "strict" fingerprinting protection
  • CEO is generally a right-wing dick.
[–] [email protected] 120 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Librewolf users (totally not biased)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 days ago

always gotta be that one person who posts the ai-generated sludge

[–] [email protected] 55 points 1 week ago (2 children)
[–] [email protected] 45 points 1 week ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 31 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Please tell me you have the whole set. I have waited for someone to post this since literally 2018

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[–] [email protected] 83 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Thanks for the TLDR. Enough said, deleted Brave app. Firefox Focus is a good alternate.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I hear Vivaldi is pretty good too

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 week ago

I used Vivaldi for a while. It's still Chromium, so I would recommend against it. There's too many good Firefox options to use anything Chromium.

[–] [email protected] 36 points 1 week ago

You should also add secretly whitelisted Facebook trackers in their adblocker, something they did a while back.

  • Shipped a TOR feature that leaked DNS

Yikes I didn't know they did that but I'm not surprised. There's a reason the people behind Tor say it should only be used via the official Tor browser, because only the Tor browser can provide that level of protection against those kind s of leaks, as well as much better fingerprinting resistance than chromium-based brave is going to give you.

[–] [email protected] 28 points 1 week ago (7 children)

CEO was forcefully ousted from Firefox for anti-LGBTQ views and donations.

I think this is making mountains out of molehills. My understanding is that he had a very good working relationship w/ LGBTQ people in the org, and he had been working for many years at Mozilla before this point. The issue was his private donations to an anti-same sex marriage initiative. He didn't push for any company policy change, didn't advertise the donation, and didn't use company funds (used personal funds), so it really shouldn't be anyone's business.

I personally disagree with his political views, but I think he was a fantastic candidate for CEO of Mozilla. How he votes or spends his personal money shouldn't be relevant at all.

Replaced existing ads on sites with Brave’s own “private” ads.

I like this idea in principle, but not in implementation. Brave should have worked with major websites to share revenue, but what Brave actually did was remove website ads and insert its own, forcing websites to go claim BAT to get any of that revenue back.

My preference here is to not use a cryptocurrency and instead have users pay in their local currency into a bucket to not see ads (and that's shared w/ the website), and that should be in collaboration w/ website owners.

Collected crypto on behalf of others without their knowledge or consent

This is a big nothing-burger.

Basically, Brave had a way to donate to a creator that wasn't affiliated with the creator. The way it works is you could donate (using BAT), and once it got to $100 worth, Brave would reach out to the creator to give them the money. They adjusted the wording to make it clear they weren't affiliated with the creator in any way.

Injected referral links into crypto websites to steal crypto revenue

Yeah, this is totally wrong, and they reversed course immediately.

Put ads in the new page tab

Not a fan, but at least you can opt-out.

Shipped a TOR feature that leaked DNS

Mistakes happen. If you truly need the anonymity, you would have multiple layers of defense (i.e. change your default DNS server) and probably not use something like Brave anyway (Tor Browser is the gold standard here).

Doesn’t disclose the ID of their search engine crawler via useragent

Also a bad move, though I am sympathetic to their reasoning here: they just don't have the resources to get permission from everyone. Search has a huge barrier to entry, and I'm in favor of more competition to Google and Microsoft here.

Removed “strict” fingerprinting protection

This was for better UX, since it broke sites. Not a fan of removing this, they should have instead had a big warning when enabling this (e.g. many sites will break if you enable this).

CEO is generally a right-wing dick.

Fair, but that should be a separate consideration from whether to use a given product. Using Brave doesn't make you a right-wing dick.

You probably wouldn't like the CEO of any company whose products you like, so basing a decision of what product to use based on that is... dumb.

I personally use Brave as a backup browser, for two reasons:

  • it's a chrome-based browser
  • it has ad-blocking

My primary browser is something based on Firefox because I value rendering-engine competition. But if I need a chromium-based browser, Brave is my go-to. I disable the crypto nonsense and keep ad-blocking on, and it's generally pretty usable.

[–] [email protected] 50 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (17 children)

He didn't push for any company policy change, didn't advertise the donation, and didn't use company funds (used personal funds), so it really shouldn't be anyone's business.

It's everyone's business that cares about those people.

How he votes or spends his personal money shouldn't be relevant at all.

Using products from a company that benefits him is empowering him to do those things.

Brave should have worked with major websites to share revenue

That's a monumental task. They would have had to create their own ad network similar to Google and then somehow out-compete them to get their business without any of the information that Google has about users.

they weren't affiliated with the creator in any way.

Yes, that's the problem.

Yeah, this is totally wrong, and they reversed course immediately.

Only because they got caught, and they didn't refund any of the crypto they earned in the interim.

Mistakes happen.

When it comes to TOR, mistakes can be a matter of life and death. People only use TOR when they need complete anonymity.

they should have instead had a big warning when enabling this (e.g. many sites will break if you enable this).

They did indeed have exactly that. It said in the actual setting itself "Strict, may break sites".

You probably wouldn't like the CEO of any company whose products you like, so basing a decision of what product to use based on that is... dumb.

Not true. I like Our Lord Gaben. I like Meredith Whitaker. I like lots of CEOs.

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[–] [email protected] 30 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Fair, but that should be a separate consideration from whether to use a given product. Using Brave doesn't make you a right-wing dick. You probably wouldn't like the CEO of any company whose products you like, so basing a decision of what product to use based on that is... dumb.

So it’s ok to buy a Tesla nowadays in your opinion? Genuinely curious.

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[–] [email protected] 18 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Holy copium batman, imagine excusing malware and checks notes literally aiding in denying rights to LGBTQ+ people.

Let me guess, you pretend to be centrist by day, and you wear

By night?

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[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 week ago (1 children)

My understanding is that he had a very good working relationship w/ LGBTQ people in the org

Then why betray them? He has nothing to gain from funding such a campaign. There is no logical explanation and sure as hell no justification for it.

[...] so it really shouldn’t be anyone’s business.
How he votes or spends his personal money shouldn’t be relevant at all.

Oh, shut up. When this asshole funds a campaign that's actively fighting against the rights of millions of people, it absolutely is our damn fucking business.

Yeah, this is totally wrong, and they reversed course immediately.

It's bad enough that they even got the idea, let alone implement and actually ship it. Negative reactions shouldn't be the first deciding factor for reversing such decisions.

Brave should have worked with major websites to share revenue

Not just share, completely give up that revenue. Blocking ads is one thing, but to then also monetise other people's content should not allow Brave to earn even a single cent.
Your proposed solution sounds fine, though.

CEO is generally a right-wing dick.

Fair, but that should be a separate consideration from whether to use a given product.

Again, no. Maybe if there weren't any alternatives, but there are plenty.

You probably wouldn’t like the CEO of any company whose products you like,

That's probably true, however, Eich is a different story. Despite not gaining anything from it, neither for his companies nor for himself, he was willing to go out of his way to support a campaign in favour of discriminating millions of people, proactively. This doesn't just make me not like him, it makes me despise him.
Other CEO's typically at least keep quiet about politics, and make me dislike them mainly because of self-interest and their resulting business decisions, which can at least still be somewhat understandable.

And let me be clear that I'm not going to jump on people who use Brave for whatever reason. But under no circumstances will I defend those who downplay or justify Brave's, and especially Eich's, actions.

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (6 children)

It’s tempting to see his donations to prop 8 as just his personal business, but like so many others you’re missing the fact that when your political beliefs are that other humans are actually subhuman and not equals, that goes beyond “personal politics.” Like outright naziism, there should be no safe place for a single ounce of this thinking. If you think it’s akin to liking shrimp more than chicken, you should deeply rethink your own “personal politics” because you’re casually glancing over the dehumanization of other people with a shrug.

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[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (13 children)

Using software made by people who are politically aligned to sell out your country to russia is stupid stupid stupid and makes you an idiot, idiot, idiot.

Its not just politics when the politics are treason and electing a kgb asset. In a normal country and time it wouldn't be a big thing wether your browser maintainer wants feee public transit or not but in current time right wing means you literally voted to destroy the entire us in order to weaken nato for the russian invasion.

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[–] [email protected] 18 points 1 week ago (4 children)

My take: No other browser is sustainable without advertising. Orion looks to be that guy, but we will see. We've already seen many other browsers stop development, like Mull and LibreWolf, due to lack of resources. Firefox itself is on the chopping block with Google potentially being forced to sell Chrome. We'll see what Kagi is able to manage with Orion, though releasing it with pretty much all the features one could want for free doesn't appear promising. I think taking a "private advertising" approach is the best we're going to get. This makes Brave sustainable.

The CEO is a dick, no doubt, but they pretty much all are, and every browser has it's drawbacks.

As far as the useragent, I kinda agree with Brave on that one. Sites want to be crawled by Google but they will block anyone else, which obviously creates an anticompetitive environment in an industry that severely needs competition.

As for the fingerprinting, I kinda get it. I'm sure some users were turning on strict protection and then complaining about the browser not working properly and ultimately ditching it while complaining to others. That being said, even with "standard" fingerprint blocking, Brave is the only browser I've used on CoverYourTracks and it returned "you have a randomized fingerprint". I'm not any sort of tech genius but I think the folks at EFF are and I trust them.

[–] [email protected] 56 points 1 week ago (7 children)

We've already seen many other browsers stop development, like (...) LibreWolf, due to lack of resources.

Wait, what?

Two things:

  1. When did Librewolf stop development?

  2. On funding, they say in their FAQ:

If we don't need funding, we won't risk becoming dependent on it. And also: no donations means no expectations. This means that people working on LibreWolf are free to move on to other projects whenever they want.

Librewolf seems to very consciously not looking for "resources" from advertising or donations, or etc. The only resource they seem to want is motivation.

Which I think is one of the big issues with OSS projects - many are based around a very small number of people being motivated to work on something for free. And it dies if that stops.

I think that having expectations and funding to continue is important, like you say.

But I'm still confused about what you mean by the "resources" comment re: Librewolf.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (4 children)

When did Librewolf stop development?

https://github.com/arkenfox/user.js/issues/1906

"Hey all, I'm on the LibreWolf team, and it's true that since the departure of @fxbrit the project has taken a total nosedive when it comes to keeping up to date with Arkenfox and settings in general. We're still making releases, but settings did not get updated."

"As @threadpanic said, since fxbrit left we have been in a kind of "maintenance" mode in terms of settings. Mainly because we are really only three people left"

"LW since fxbrit left/died/who-knows has gone to shit - I worked with him behind the scenes to make the right choices and while he would do his own analysis, we always agreed, and his voice influenced them. Now they don't know what they are doing, and in fact have compromised security and make really stupid decisions. Same goes for all the other forks - really dubious shit going"

Which I think is one of the big issues with OSS projects - many are based around a very small number of people being motivated to work on something for free. And it dies if that stops.

Exactly.

But I'm still confused about what you mean by the "resources" comment re: Librewolf.

"Resources" can refer to many different things, in this case it is motivation/prioritization.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 week ago (4 children)

That thread is several months old, and is specifically about integrating Arkenfox settings changes. I wouldn't say Librewolf has ceased development based on the fact that their default settings differ from Arkenfox. Their Codeberg site shows ongoing work.

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[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago

It's still being kept up to date, just not getting new features, and the security issues have been patched up as they come along. It's not a dead project yet. Maintaining Librewolf isn't impossible since Firefox is doing the heavy lifting.

The main issue is mostly that it relies on Firefox.

Honestly, I don't mind the paid browser route. Browsers, and a lot of software, used to be paid, and it feels like things were less shit when some of it was.

I think ideally we'd see 2 versions of software like some used to be in the 90s - a free, stripped down version that only does basic functions (think Microsoft WordPad Vs Microsoft Word) and a pair full version. This model can still allow FOSS to exist as well, like perhaps having LibreOffice as is, and then having an enterprise version that has additional networking features and support that's paid for businesses, with all money from that going into the maintenance of LibreOffice.

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 week ago (5 children)

My take: We can have an open source browser. No resources are required. We don't need ads to view content we make. There is no need for a megacorp or any entity taking money and controlling us.

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (5 children)

No browser is sustainable without money because

  • The infrastructure and labor costs money
  • Google charges out the ass for Widevine which is a must for Netflix, Apple TV+, etc
  • H.264 Licensing
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[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Since when did LibreWolf stop development? First I heard of it, and concerning if accurate.

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Those are good reasons to ditch a product. Yet, at the same time, inside the Apple ecosystem this is the only browser that allows cross platform watching of yt without any ads, therefore suffocating Google and the fat cat MKBHD influencers from income.

So it’s like an evil to tame another evil to me atm.

Of course the best path forward would be to ditch both Brave and yt and then just get Nebula/patreon or something for serious content browsing.

I’m curious though: if I just use Brace only with a few yt tabs open and never open the new empty tab or visit another site, does Brave get any revenue from me?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago

Can you not use Firefox on apple products? They've got extensions for that I'm sure

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[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago

It's so "weird" how the same kind of person who would be openly anti-LGBTQ would also make a such a sketchy product.

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