• @Jaximus@lemmy.ml
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      181 year ago

      Firefox has been as fast as chrome on most websites for some years now. Chrome was quick a decade ago, not anymore…

    • @Dreadrat@lemm.ee
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      31 year ago

      As soon as adblock stops working the nerds will move.

      Then after a while the non nerds will hear about it from the nerds…then suddenly everyone needs to support Firefox again…

      • @intrepid@lemmy.ca
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        31 year ago

        Anyone still using chrome doesn’t deserve the nerd tag. How many neurons does it take to understand the consequences of using it? 3?

        • @MJBrune@beehaw.org
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          -11 year ago

          Eh, don’t gate keep. You can be a nerd in very many things and honestly a lot of nerds still use chrome and windows because that’s what works. I use Firefox daily and it breaks a lot of sites. I can’t even log into patreon with disabling firefoxs Cross site blocking because I use Google oauth to log in.

          • @intrepid@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Don’t gate keep what? That’s such a lazy way of shutting down criticism. People are responsible for taking consumer decisions that don’t ruin their future prospects. At least in the case of using browsers, regular folks can be forgiven since decisions that destroy the web ecosystem are taken before they use those anti-features. But ‘nerds’ have the foresight to see it coming - if they keep using Chrome, then it’s pure laziness. They are responsible for letting this happen by not communicating enough and not raising a voice to warn others. In any fields, it’s the job of the experts to inform others about potential pitfalls. In tech, that role belongs to nerds. If you aren’t doing that then you probably don’t have what it is needed to be a ‘nerd’.

            I can’t even log into patreon with disabling firefoxs Cross site blocking because I use Google oauth to log in.

            Back to my point. We wouldn’t be in this state if ‘nerds’ did their job in the first place.

          • d-RLY?
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            01 year ago

            I have only ever had one project on there that has been an issue. But even then it happens with all the browsers I try. Do you use any other security/privacy extensions?

            The rest is really just a rant about literally getting people to use alternatives instead of Chrome.

            Also those nerds that like Chrome could just switch over to basically any other Chromium-based browser to show that they don’t support Google’s new attempts to make the internet only play by corpo rules. Edge and Brave work well for normies and for nerds (though Microsoft is really really trying to make it more frustrating as possible and adding their own data mining with every update). Just have to disable various things. Like the crypto stuff on Brave, and basically anything that Microsoft tries to tell you to use. Vivaldi is a really impressive option for power users. Their UI customization are wild af and can be a bit overwhelming from the sheer amount of options. Opera is okay too, but it seems to be confusing with how it presents its options and some features seem to overlap too much for my taste with how extensions can show up in multiple places. And of course there is Chromium, but the lack of auto updates and other things defaultly not present makes it not a good option for normies.

            I personally have Brave, Chrome, Edge, Firefox, LibreWolf, Mulvad, Palemoon, Tor, Vivaldi, and Waterfox installed on my main PC. So I can see how various projects are working and to be super ready to answer the question “have you tried loading the site with a different browser” if I need to contact support of a site. Though I tend to use Mulvad for searching torrent sites and Tor for onion sites. And LibreWolf, Palemoon, and Waterfox are kind of more out of an interest in seeing how different Firefox based browsers are coming along. Out of the Chromium browsers, I tend to use Vivaldi the most as it is fun to use as an RSS feed reader and can treat Mastodon/Misskey/Foundkey as kind of apps via slide-out sidebar. Can also do email similar to how a normal email app would (though not close to as many power features). Brave would be next go-to, especially now that they have the vertical tabs working as smoothly and pretty as Edge does. The vertical tabs was basically the only reason I used Edge for a bit. All the other vertical tabs from browsers like Vivaldi or extensions always feel/look bad, and the extension based ones don’t remove the normal horizontal tabs. So it always breaks the overall UI consistency.

            Should anyone that isn’t me or a site designer/tester have more than maybe two or three browsers installed? Hell no, lol. But the main point is that folks that like Chrome but would like to show that they don’t like how Google is trying to re-create the old days of Internet Explorer do have options. Get those daily installs and usage metrics of Chrome to drop after so many years of being the new replacement default. Most likely won’t stop them from doing bad shit, but it would bring back some amount of competition and more importantly give more reasons for sites to respect universal standers and not just be coded to only work with one browser. We really don’t need to see a return of those little icons on every site saying that it “Works best with IE”. For profit propratary shit is how we will cease to be able to have an open internet that isn’t just HR approved and all requiring us to be “allowed” to interact with any of it.

          • @nik282000@lemmy.ml
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            01 year ago

            The sites are broken, FireFox doesn’t break them. They make the choice to use non-standard features.

            • @flux@lemmy.ml
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              21 year ago

              I was under the impression cross-site cookies are a standard feature per the RFC, though? Or is Patreon using some kind of non-standard extension?

              • @nik282000@lemmy.ml
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                11 year ago

                I don’t know the standard but if Google is involved you know they are going to be pushing people to use their own ‘extensions’ of the standard to lock both the hosts and users into their ecosystem. It’s the same thing as Microsoft’s ActiveX making sites IE only in the early 2000s.

      • @beteljuice@lemmy.ml
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        21 year ago

        That’s called the halo effect, where a small but influential group of people make something popular.

  • @wolfylow@lemmy.world
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    411 year ago

    Man I wish we hadn’t all fallen for the “don’t be evil” motto all those years ago.

    This move from Google is utter, utter bullshit.

    • Dale
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      241 year ago

      Well they did remove the don’t be evil motto… guess it didn’t fit their business model

      • JoeCoT
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        141 year ago

        Spoiler: it fits very few company’s business models. Some companies can avoid it, if their owners/board want to. But once they take venture capital, or go public, they lose that choice. And that “don’t be evil” promise, and most any other, is void.

        • aeternum
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          51 year ago

          once they go public, the only goal is MOAR MONEY! reddit will also fall into this trap when/if they go public.

          • @beteljuice@lemmy.ml
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            11 year ago

            Reddit already fell into the trap a while ago. They’ve started walking into a cave they found in a trap, and now it’s so bad that we are here.

          • themeatbridge
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            01 year ago

            Shareholders can actually sue a business for making ethical decisions that leave money on the table.

              • themeatbridge
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                11 year ago

                You’re right, because usually the deeper pockets win. It’s likely the shareholders would just fire the executive and sue later, and then settle for whatever part of the golden parachute they want back.

    • @intrepid@lemmy.ca
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      31 year ago

      We all did. It’s very much possible that they really meant it at the time. Most companies start with a lot of idealism. And then they become successful and consequently the target of cronies. They feel like they’re entitled to everyone else’s earnings and the dark pattern begins.

  • IHeartBadCode
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    251 year ago

    but this is Google, and they control Chrome, and this probably still won’t make people switch to Firefox

    Yeah. People just simply will not do things that are in their best interest. This is literally the biggest issue that was had with IE. Inertia.

      • @anguo@lemmy.ca
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        181 year ago

        There is Firefox for Android. You’re still on Android, but you can have some control left.

        • qupada
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          91 year ago

          Unfortunately Firefox doesn’t have a replacement for the “Android System WebView” component, so any app that embeds a browser component (and oh boy is that a lot of them) will still be using Chrome.

          There’s a relevant ticket here: https://github.com/mozilla/geckoview/issues/167

          It should be possible to have a shim that allows Mozilla’s “GeckoView” component to implement the API, but - per that ticket, at least - most Android ROMs won’t allow alternatives to the Google one.

          The Firefox browser is genuinely great, but it’s so far from possible to replace Chrome with it everywhere a browser is used.

          • @anguo@lemmy.ca
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            11 year ago

            A lot of those apps allow you to open links in an external browser instead, but yes, that is a problem

        • @codapine@lemm.ee
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          51 year ago

          You can’t uninstall Chrome most likely, but maybe your stock/rom will allow you to “disable” it.

          • DacoTaco
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            1 year ago

            Good idea. Let me disable it and see what breaks! ( i have firefox and inbrowser installed on lineageos )

        • @floofloof@lemmy.caOP
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          41 year ago

          Also Firefox Focus, which forgets your browsing history when you close it or hit the trashcan button.

      • The Cuuuuube
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        81 year ago

        Privacy and digital rights are not a binary “use strange hard to use tools or give everything to google.” There are things you can do to improve your ability to own your own data. Giving up immediately is letting perfect be the enemy of good. Running Firefox on your google phone will still win you back something

      • reflex
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        41 year ago

        Google has me by the balls anyway.

        GrapheneOS? Are you on a Pixel?

  • TacoButtPlug
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    141 year ago

    So they’re baking user behavior tracking into the browser but calling it “privacy”? What’s the difference between this and colors cookie tracking?

  • TheKarion
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    141 year ago

    Why do people still use chrome? Its honestly such a bad experience

    • InisSieferI
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      81 year ago

      It used to be the fastest, but nowadays I find its performance doesn’t surpass Firefox and Edge that much. Actually, I haven’t used Chrome much at all recently, so maybe it doesn’t at all nowadays. I definitely haven’t noticed it’s absence now that I’ve been slowly returning to Firefox thanks to Google and Microsoft’s constant privacy snafoos.

      • @floofloof@lemmy.caOP
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        11 year ago

        These days Chrome can be slower than other browsers. The days of it having a performance advantage are over. Still, it’s worth picking a browser that’s not based on Chromium, just to make it a little harder for Google to dictate how the web works.

    • @fat_stig@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Just like with IE in the distant past, I’m noticing websites that insist that you use Chrome to use their systems, lazy Devs can’t be arsed to make their code platform agnostic. Or more likely, management took the decision. Where I work we have transitioned to Edge because it works with our back end systems. But there are still some SaaS systems I use that only guarantee compatibility with Chrome.

      I use Firefox at home, natch.

      Edit; I use Firefox on my Sony phone as well, have uninstalled Chrome but now I find that ChatGPT only works with Chrome. Agghhh

  • Mwalimu
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    91 year ago

    The Federated Learning of Cohorts and now the Topics API are part of a plan to pitch an “alternative” tracking platform, and Google argues that there has to be a tracking alternative—you can’t just not be spied on.

    • Kbin_space_program
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      1 year ago

      Gonna be hilarious when hackers figure out how to hijack where this reports back to. Particularly since Google recently got rid of most of their senior devs you know, the ones who can actually make secure code.

  • @kakes@sh.itjust.works
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    71 year ago

    They say this is meant to be an eventual replacement for tracking via cookies, but there is literally no way this won’t become supplemental to current tracking methods. And I think they know that.

    • @bluefirex@lemmy.world
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      51 year ago

      While I don’t agree with what Google does, they want to remove third-party cookies entirely next year. So it’s indeed a replacement, not supplemental.

  • @ulkesh@beehaw.org
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    41 year ago

    Aww good for Google. Meanwhile I’ll keep using a FOSS browser that doesn’t screw its users with every new feature.

    • smpl
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      11 year ago

      and which one would that be?

  • @codapine@lemm.ee
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    41 year ago

    And then hoodwink people into upgrading with the promise of Material You themes 🙄

    I hope Chromium-based Vivaldi is still okay. I’m pretty invested in some of its features (though I have to admit it is getting more bloaty).

    • @placatedmayhem@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      No. There are a whole bag of tactics to get you to enable it like “Whoops, got re-enabled in an update. Our bad.”, which has happened before, or a myriad of dark patterns. By changing the name of this at least twice now when it got backlash from users, Google has shown it doesn’t care about Chrome users’ preferences, only that it wants this to fly under the radar so that every Chrome user won’t know to disable it.

      Change to a browser that actually gives a crap about your privacy. As a bonus, changing helps reduce Google’s ability to dictate what happens to the web via Chrome’s huge user base, like the recent “Web Environment Integrity” push.

    • cassetti
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      31 year ago

      Lol, oh sweet child. You have much to learn about what a corporation says, and what they’re forced to do by government regulations. Without them, corporations can (and will) do anything they want for the sake of more profits.

      Unfortunately, with a country run by a bunch of geriatrics who hardly understand the concept of the “internet” and hardware/software, let alone the nuances of different social media platforms or how different communities within the internet interact.

    • @floofloof@lemmy.caOP
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      11 year ago

      Sorry about that. Lemmy usually warns me if a link has been posted already, but it didn’t this time.