Support Brendan Eich: Use Brave

 

For all of you who, like me, stopped using Firefox because of the company’s shameful “woke” treatment of Brendan Eich, feel free to join me in using the Brave web browser. Mr. Eich is the founder/president of that company, and the browser is pretty fast. They are also partnered with search engine DuckDuckGo rather than Google, another plus.

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  1. Headedwest Coolidge
    Headedwest
    @Headedwest

    Brave is the most privacy-focused browser out there. I use it a lot.

    Its basis is Chromium, the open-source foundation for Chrome (without all the spying-on-you bits), so for most purposes it will function like Chrome.

    • #1
  2. SkipSul Inactive
    SkipSul
    @skipsul

    Have they improved the UI?  I last tried to use it a couple of years ago and was not impressed at all.

    • #2
  3. Barry Jones Thatcher
    Barry Jones
    @BarryJones

    I use and have for years. I like it…it has its quirks but is usable and cuts down on the tracking. I recommend trying it if you haven’t…

    • #3
  4. Bishop Wash Member
    Bishop Wash
    @BishopWash

    I switched a few months ago and it seems to be working fine. I was looking at the ad block button and see that there’s a way to send a tip to a site. When on Ricochet, it says that the site hasn’t been verified so tips won’t be paid to it until it is. It wouldn’t be much money but it might be worth the effort. @max?

    • #4
  5. Randy Webster Inactive
    Randy Webster
    @RandyWebster

    Having bookmarks open in a sidebar is non-negotiable.  When I typed “sidebar” into Brave help, it didn’t even recognize the question.

    • #5
  6. Mark Camp Member
    Mark Camp
    @MarkCamp

    When I read the OP I installed Brave and am using it now.

    • #6
  7. Freeven Member
    Freeven
    @Freeven

    I’ve been using Brave for about a year, and DuckDuckGo for several years. I’m pleased with both, with one exception.

    I read somewhere that if you do a Google search for “american inventors,” only Black inventors show up. I tried it in Google, and sure enough, no White faces. (It’s very noticeable if you click on the “Images” link at the top of the search.) I then tried it in DDG and got the same results. So I guess DDG is better on privacy, but it seems to get it’s woke results via Google. I was/am disappointed.

     

    • #7
  8. Pete EE Member
    Pete EE
    @PeteEE

    Bishop Wash (View Comment):

    I switched a few months ago and it seems to be working fine. I was looking at the ad block button and see that there’s a way to send a tip to a site. When on Ricochet, it says that the site hasn’t been verified so tips won’t be paid to it until it is. It wouldn’t be much money but it might be worth the effort. @max?

    I have been using it for years. Originally, they promised a tips system but I thought they gave up on that. How do you get tips to work?

    • #8
  9. SkipSul Inactive
    SkipSul
    @skipsul

    Randy Webster (View Comment):

    Having bookmarks open in a sidebar is non-negotiable. When I typed “sidebar” into Brave help, it didn’t even recognize the question.

    That was something I really disliked before too.  I loathe the trend of hiding tools away.  I USE that stuff, and it pisses me off that devs think they should hide it for strictly aesthetic reasons.

    • #9
  10. Sisyphus Member
    Sisyphus
    @Sisyphus

    The only caveat I would raise here is that the code base is Google’s, and there is no reason to expect Google to suddenly respect your privacy rather than undermine it by any means necessary,

    • #10
  11. David Foster Member
    David Foster
    @DavidFoster

    I use Brave for most things.  For one thing, there are many sites that are so ad-cluttered that they aren’t even readable on other browser, but look fine on Brave.

     

    • #11
  12. Headedwest Coolidge
    Headedwest
    @Headedwest

    SkipSul (View Comment):

    Have they improved the UI? I last tried to use it a couple of years ago and was not impressed at all.

    It is quite different from a couple of years ago.

    • #12
  13. Headedwest Coolidge
    Headedwest
    @Headedwest

    Sisyphus (View Comment):

    The only caveat I would raise here is that the code base is Google’s, and there is no reason to expect Google to suddenly respect your privacy rather than undermine it by any means necessary,

    Remember, Chromium is not Chrome.

    • #13
  14. RushBabe49 Thatcher
    RushBabe49
    @RushBabe49

    I was having trouble staying logged into my personal blog.  After a conversation with tech support at WordPress, I discovered that the issue was Safari blocking “tracking” my activity on the Web.  Once I re-enabled that, I was again able to stay logged into my own blog, including the ability to write posts from the front-end without having to go to the back end to write and comment on my own posts.

    • #14
  15. Duane Oyen Member
    Duane Oyen
    @DuaneOyen

    SkipSul (View Comment):

    Randy Webster (View Comment):

    Having bookmarks open in a sidebar is non-negotiable. When I typed “sidebar” into Brave help, it didn’t even recognize the question.

    That was something I really disliked before too. I loathe the trend of hiding tools away. I USE that stuff, and it pisses me off that devs think they should hide it for strictly aesthetic reasons.

    I used Firefox and then Pale Moon solely to get the actual old-time menu bar across the top, and it makes me absolutely angry that it is not simply an alternative for all browsers.  But Pale Moon has been crashing or locking up so much lately- obviously to just milk data, etc., that I finally got sick of it and decided to suffer.  I am mildly accustomed now to the Amazon Fire browser, so I choke and go with things.

    I still refuse to carry my cell phone around every place other than a car trip, or use it for things other than, you know, phone calls and texts.

    • #15
  16. Bishop Wash Member
    Bishop Wash
    @BishopWash

    Pete EE (View Comment):

    Bishop Wash (View Comment):

    I switched a few months ago and it seems to be working fine. I was looking at the ad block button and see that there’s a way to send a tip to a site. When on Ricochet, it says that the site hasn’t been verified so tips won’t be paid to it until it is. It wouldn’t be much money but it might be worth the effort. @max?

    I have been using it for years. Originally, they promised a tips system but I thought they gave up on that. How do you get tips to work?

    I click on the triangle in the upper right corner and it brings up the rewards summary. Here’s a screenshot.

    • #16
  17. Joseph Stanko Coolidge
    Joseph Stanko
    @JosephStanko

    SkipSul (View Comment):

    Have they improved the UI? I last tried to use it a couple of years ago and was not impressed at all.

    The early version was based on Electron, then they rewrote it using Chromium.  The early versions were pretty buggy but it’s gotten a lot better over the years.

    • #17
  18. Joseph Stanko Coolidge
    Joseph Stanko
    @JosephStanko

    RushBabe49 (View Comment):

    I was having trouble staying logged into my personal blog. After a conversation with tech support at WordPress, I discovered that the issue was Safari blocking “tracking” my activity on the Web. Once I re-enabled that, I was again able to stay logged into my own blog, including the ability to write posts from the front-end without having to go to the back end to write and comment on my own posts.

    Brave has a simple Shields Up/Down toggle, you can set Shields Down for a site you trust (like your personal blog) while still preventing other less trustworthy sites from tracking you.

    • #18
  19. Old Buckeye Inactive
    Old Buckeye
    @OldBuckeye

    Since we’re on the subject of browsers, can the computer types tell me why I should or should not be using Opera? I switched to it after the Eich dustup and haven’t had any complaints, but don’t know exactly who I’m supporting or who I’m letting collect my data, or any other background machinations I don’t wish to be a party to.

    Thanks for any insights!

    • #19
  20. Hartmann von Aue Member
    Hartmann von Aue
    @HartmannvonAue

    I use it for work all the time. All of my online dictionaries are bookmarked in Brave. 

    • #20
  21. Stad Coolidge
    Stad
    @Stad

    Headedwest (View Comment):

    Brave is the most privacy-focused browser out there. I use it a lot.

    Its basis is Chromium, the open-source foundation for Chrome (without all the spying-on-you bits), so for most purposes it will function like Chrome.

    The one thing I don’t like is the right-to-left way the customization menus open.  Oh, another thing: they recently added another layer of menus, which means I now have to do seven clicks to get to some settings (I keep the sound muted except when viewing videos).  I know it sounds like a first-world problem, but I really think layers of menus or folders shouldn’t be more than three deep . . .

    • #21
  22. Headedwest Coolidge
    Headedwest
    @Headedwest

    Old Buckeye (View Comment):

    Since we’re on the subject of browsers, can the computer types tell me why I should or should not be using Opera? I switched to it after the Eich dustup and haven’t had any complaints, but don’t know exactly who I’m supporting or who I’m letting collect my data, or any other background machinations I don’t wish to be a party to.

    Thanks for any insights!

    I think Opera was sold to a Chinese company a few years ago. Maybe it has changed hands again; I haven’t heard. 

    • #22
  23. Stad Coolidge
    Stad
    @Stad

    Freeven (View Comment):

    I’ve been using Brave for about a year, and DuckDuckGo for several years. I’m pleased with both, with one exception.

    I read somewhere that if you do a Google search for “american inventors,” only Black inventors show up. I tried it in Google, and sure enough, no White faces. (It’s very noticeable if you click on the “Images” link at the top of the search.) I then tried it in DDG and got the same results. So I guess DDG is better on privacy, but it seems to get it’s woke results via Google. I was/am disappointed.

     

    I tried it and got regular results.  Perhaps DDG sensed your white privilege . . .

    • #23
  24. Sisyphus Member
    Sisyphus
    @Sisyphus

    Stad (View Comment):
    I know it sounds like a first-world problem, but I really think layers of menus or folders shouldn’t be more than three deep . . .

    Yes! This has been a known thing for thirty years, but every generation has to relearn the basics. 

    • #24
  25. Stad Coolidge
    Stad
    @Stad

    Sisyphus (View Comment):

    Stad (View Comment):
    I know it sounds like a first-world problem, but I really think layers of menus or folders shouldn’t be more than three deep . . .

    Yes! This has been a known thing for thirty years, but every generation has to relearn the basics.

    One of the first things I did when I was a nuclear engineering consultant was to perform a control room design review for a commercial nuclear power plant.  On the team were four human factors engineers, and I learned an awful lot of stuff from them about how to design controls and indications (and later physical plant equipment) such that the likelihood of human error was minimized.  The same went for procedures.

    Although people use software without procedures, some of the interfaces in both productivity software and games leave a lot to be desired.  This is the big reason I still use Word and Excel 2003.  The dropdown menus are small, logically grouped, and can be customized to not use icons.  The modern versions use The Ribbon, which I despise.  Here’s my blank piece of paper in Word (sorry the picture is a little fuzzy):

    Now here’s a picture of The Ribbon:

    It takes up a lot of space, it’s cluttered, not well organized, and a huge distraction when I’m trying to write.  I know it’s a matter of personal preference, but many users have begged Microsoft to have a classic menu option.  Uh uh.  You will use the ribbon and you will love it – just like socialism . . .

    • #25
  26. The Reticulator Member
    The Reticulator
    @TheReticulator

    I use Brave on my Android devices, now that Chrome doesn’t allow me to prevent news from hate media sites from appearing on the main page. But I don’t use it very much on my Windows computers because Chromium no longer provides or allows a way to block all autoplay of video.  (Note that word all. Blocking autoplay on sites that Chromium will allow me to block is not good enough.)

    • #26
  27. SkipSul Inactive
    SkipSul
    @skipsul

    Stad (View Comment):

    Sisyphus (View Comment):

    Stad (View Comment):
    I know it sounds like a first-world problem, but I really think layers of menus or folders shouldn’t be more than three deep . . .

    Yes! This has been a known thing for thirty years, but every generation has to relearn the basics.

    One of the first things I did when I was a nuclear engineering consultant was to perform a control room design review for a commercial nuclear power plant. On the team were four human factors engineers, and I learned an awful lot of stuff from them about how to design controls and indications (and later physical plant equipment) such that the likelihood of human error was minimized. The same went for procedures.

    Although people use software without procedures, some of the interfaces in both productivity software and games leave a lot to be desired. This is the big reason I still use Word and Excel 2003. The dropdown menus are small, logically grouped, and can be customized to not use icons. The modern versions use The Ribbon, which I despise. Here’s my blank piece of paper in Word (sorry the picture is a little fuzzy):

    Now here’s a picture of The Ribbon:

    It takes up a lot of space, it’s cluttered, not well organized, and a huge distraction when I’m trying to write. I know it’s a matter of personal preference, but many users have begged Microsoft to have a classic menu option. Uh uh. You will use the ribbon and you will love it – just like socialism . . .

    I use Scrivener for most of my writing now.  Lets me focus on the work, organize drafts and notes, fork draft versions, keep track of complicated projects.

    • #27
  28. Freeven Member
    Freeven
    @Freeven

    Stad (View Comment):

    Freeven (View Comment):

    I’ve been using Brave for about a year, and DuckDuckGo for several years. I’m pleased with both, with one exception.

    I read somewhere that if you do a Google search for “american inventors,” only Black inventors show up. I tried it in Google, and sure enough, no White faces. (It’s very noticeable if you click on the “Images” link at the top of the search.) I then tried it in DDG and got the same results. So I guess DDG is better on privacy, but it seems to get it’s woke results via Google. I was/am disappointed.

     

    I tried it and got regular results. Perhaps DDG sensed your white privilege . . .

    Perhaps so. I just tried it again, both through Brave (with DDG as the default search engine) and directly from the DDG web site. Still getting getting lists of non-White inventors.

    • #28
  29. Stad Coolidge
    Stad
    @Stad

    SkipSul (View Comment):

    Stad (View Comment):

    Sisyphus (View Comment):

    Stad (View Comment):
    I know it sounds like a first-world problem, but I really think layers of menus or folders shouldn’t be more than three deep . . .

    Yes! This has been a known thing for thirty years, but every generation has to relearn the basics.

    One of the first things I did when I was a nuclear engineering consultant was to perform a control room design review for a commercial nuclear power plant. On the team were four human factors engineers, and I learned an awful lot of stuff from them about how to design controls and indications (and later physical plant equipment) such that the likelihood of human error was minimized. The same went for procedures.

    Although people use software without procedures, some of the interfaces in both productivity software and games leave a lot to be desired. This is the big reason I still use Word and Excel 2003. The dropdown menus are small, logically grouped, and can be customized to not use icons. The modern versions use The Ribbon, which I despise. Here’s my blank piece of paper in Word (sorry the picture is a little fuzzy):

    Now here’s a picture of The Ribbon:

    It takes up a lot of space, it’s cluttered, not well organized, and a huge distraction when I’m trying to write. I know it’s a matter of personal preference, but many users have begged Microsoft to have a classic menu option. Uh uh. You will use the ribbon and you will love it – just like socialism . . .

    I use Scrivener for most of my writing now. Lets me focus on the work, organize drafts and notes, fork draft versions, keep track of complicated projects.

    I’ll have to check it out if I ever lose my Office 2003 disk . . .

    • #29
  30. JustmeinAZ Member
    JustmeinAZ
    @JustmeinAZ

    Using DDG for American inventors this is the first result I get:

    Alexander Graham Bell

    John Moses Browning

    Willis Carter

    Samuel Colt

    Henry Ford

    Robert Fulton

    Charles Goodyear

    Cyrus McCormick

    Samuel F.B. Morse

    Dr. Jonas Salk

    Eli Whitney

    • #30
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