It is what it is
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changed the search engine in Firefox
Which... takes maximum 1min to do.
or default in any of the forks!
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hey before they do that, can i look through their files on me? theres some porn i havent been able to refind anywhere
Wouldn't that be amazing! I have single frames of good videos stuck in my head that I can never find again.
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That was actually their lawyer's argument, that "incognito mode" being private was just something people assumed and ran with, not their fault.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]I mean, they called it "Incognito".
Incognito: having one's true identity concealed
If it doesn't conceal your identity, then that's pretty clearly misleading. They're not selling to experts, the users of this are laypeople. It's like if you sold a "waterproof phone" and the packaging all made it look like it could withstand water, but then when it got wet it broke and you were like "people just assumed it was waterproof, it's not our fault".
Sure experts could tell, and enthusiasts would read the expert opinions on it, but that's not something you should expect of laypeople considering how it is presented. -
I haven't used Chrome in years. Brave and firefox, that's my crowd.
same i use Librewolf nowadays
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Firefox's main funding was from Google being their default search engine. Which of course means anything searched in Google (via the URL field) is recorded to the external IP address logs. So unless you are going directly to the website or changed the search engine in Firefox, yes Google was recording said information (or at least compiling the numbers for data analytics) to use for advertising purposes.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Firefox’s main funding was
was ? I think it still is
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It’s Google. If you are shocked by this, you deserve to be tracked.
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Brave is also Chromium.
Firefox is also a web browser.
Oh sorry, I thought we were making meaningless comparisons.
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Things do the opposite of what their name says they do. We've been in 1984/F451 bizarro world for a while, now.
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Firefox is also a web browser.
Oh sorry, I thought we were making meaningless comparisons.
So even though Brave is made on a Google product, Google doesn't get the data? Is that what you're saying? Because Google is such an honest company, sure they have no interest in the data of other browser instances made with their platform. Right?
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It’s Google. If you are shocked by this, you deserve to be tracked.
No, not really. There are low bars; this isn't one of them. This is not something I expect average people who aren't into technology to anticipate. Nerds like me, yeah. But not the public. Though we're getting to that point.
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It’s Google. If you are shocked by this, you deserve to be tracked.
Putting the burden on users is a very Google thing to do, my dude.
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It’s Google. If you are shocked by this, you deserve to be tracked.
That's called victim blaming.
But yeah. I really hope people stop using Google products. Google is evil.
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So even though Brave is made on a Google product, Google doesn't get the data? Is that what you're saying? Because Google is such an honest company, sure they have no interest in the data of other browser instances made with their platform. Right?
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Yes. That is in fact what I'm saying. Brave has built in blockers for ads, trackers, and cookies. It has a built-in VPN. It has a built-in Tor browser. It's default search engine is DDG instead of Google. Considering Firefox defaults to Google for searches, you're likely giving more data to Google through Firefox than you would using Brave.
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Yes. That is in fact what I'm saying. Brave has built in blockers for ads, trackers, and cookies. It has a built-in VPN. It has a built-in Tor browser. It's default search engine is DDG instead of Google. Considering Firefox defaults to Google for searches, you're likely giving more data to Google through Firefox than you would using Brave.
You clearly have no knowledge on how browser instances work. Just because Brave has built-in stuff like ad blockers doesn't mean the Chromium platform isn't Google anymore and Google has no more access to the data. No matter the extra features it has. Using Chromium means sharing data with Google.
Why would using Firefox share more data with Google than a Chromium browser, when Firefox is the only alternative to Chromium, made by a different company and not at all affiliated with Google?
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The Google Incognito tab in any browser clarifies that while it prevents your browsing history from being saved on your device, it does not make your browsing completely private.
Websites you visit, your employer (if on a work network), and your internet service provider (ISP) can still track your online activity.
Hell it even has a link that leads directly to the privacy policy
https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/9845881?hl=en-GB
The only thing that shocks me is that no one ever reads it
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hey before they do that, can i look through their files on me? theres some porn i havent been able to refind anywhere
There is a r/tipofmypenis for that
Maybe someone knows a Lemmy alternative
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Incognito mode was always just to hide your local browser history. Think Google would NOT track you?
Do you have Google maps? They know where you are at all times.
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Yes. That is in fact what I'm saying. Brave has built in blockers for ads, trackers, and cookies. It has a built-in VPN. It has a built-in Tor browser. It's default search engine is DDG instead of Google. Considering Firefox defaults to Google for searches, you're likely giving more data to Google through Firefox than you would using Brave.
It does have that, but don't for a minute think they actually control chromium. If Google wanted to they could make life very difficult for brave.
Currently brave still has support for manifest v2 but that will eventually be removed and the more brave diverges from the upstream the more work is required to keep it going.
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You clearly have no knowledge on how browser instances work. Just because Brave has built-in stuff like ad blockers doesn't mean the Chromium platform isn't Google anymore and Google has no more access to the data. No matter the extra features it has. Using Chromium means sharing data with Google.
Why would using Firefox share more data with Google than a Chromium browser, when Firefox is the only alternative to Chromium, made by a different company and not at all affiliated with Google?
wrote on last edited by [email protected]I'm not supporting brave here, but do you have any evidence that the open source Chromium browser sends data to Google in any situation?
The way I see it, Chromium is like android AOSP without Google apps, less functional but generally de-googled.I can't say I've reviewed every line of code in that huge project, but I'd be shocked if the rest of the open source community working on Chromium was willing to have tracking code in it or anything else which phones home to Google, even if the majority of the developers working on the open source project are Google engineers.
Ultimately, both Brave and Firefox are open source, so you can look through the code and verify for yourself whether either browser are doing something unethical.
This ungoogled-chromoim project is probably worth checking out, they maintain a patch set which explicitly removes the only things in chromium which send data to Google, which is pretty much just the web services for search bar autocomplete and DNS pre-fetching etc.
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Man, even then it was clear what it was doing, are they supposed to list every single website you visit that might track you?