Comment by charcircuit
Comment by charcircuit 3 hours ago
Why do you want to not use a blink based browser? Are there any changes to the engine you are looking for that a competing browser could help develop.
Comment by charcircuit 3 hours ago
Why do you want to not use a blink based browser? Are there any changes to the engine you are looking for that a competing browser could help develop.
To me blink as a render engine is too closely coupled to Google. Even though technically chromium is disconnected and open source, the amount of leverage Google has is too high.
I dread the possibility that gecko and webkit browsers truly die out, and the single biggest name in web advertising has unilateral sway over the direction of web standards.
A good example of this is that through the exclusive leverage of Google, all blink based browsers are phasing out support for Manifest V2. A widely unpopular, forcing change. If I'm using a blink based browser I become vulnerable to any other profit motivated changes like that one.
Mozilla might be trying their hardest to do the same with this AI shlock, but if I have to choose between the trillion dollar market cap dictator of the internet and the little kid playing pretend evil billionaire in their sandbox? Well, Mozilla is definitely the less threatening of the two in that regard.
Participarion in web standards includes multiple different browsers even if they use the same browser engine. If we had only blink based browsers, it wouldn't be just Google at the table.
>phasing out support for Manifest V2. A widely unpopular, forcing change.
It was unpopular among a niche minority. Most of which didn't undersrand what actually changed with MV3, nor did most people understand the evolution of MV3 over time.
I don't know the details, but breaking uBO was the obvious negative impact for users.
Is there some additional information that you think would change the opinion of the users who want strong adblocking capabilities?
Yeah, what IS preventing you is the lack of competing browsers.
But notably not lack of competing browser engines as the power of these decisions come from the product and not the open source libraries the product uses.
Brave has adblocking built into blink itself, so you no longer need to trust a 3rd party browser extention.
I think gorhill is far more trustworthy than a whole new browser based on crypto.
It's not based on cryptocurrency, there are just extra features that use it. Unstoppable domains is an optional feature. You don't need to visit them, but it gives value to people by letting them actually own their domain instead of leasing it from ICANN. Viewing ads to earn BAT is an optional feature. As I mentioned ad blocking is built in so you can have it show no ads if you want.
Not OP but I've never used anything but Firefox. I simply want to keep using my favourite browser, the one I have most control over.