this post was submitted on 27 Dec 2025
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[–] Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zone 244 points 1 day ago (27 children)

I think a lot of people don't know any of the controversy related to brave and just use it because they know it as the most private chromium browser

[–] Dojan@pawb.social 196 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Marketing has really worked for Brave.

[–] tomiant@piefed.social 57 points 1 day ago

That is the sad state of the world. Mass manipulating sentiment like some commercial psyop is a built in "feature" of the system.

[–] Avicenna@programming.dev 7 points 1 day ago

we live in an era where you can make a puke like prime the most desired drink in the world, so yeah.

[–] I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world 114 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (7 children)

I know of the controversies, I just don't think they're all that big when you actually examine them.

Homophobia

I'm part of the LGBT community and I just think there are bigger fish to fry. One of the guys involved made a $1k donation to an anti-prop 8 campaign like 15 years ago. That's it. That's the controversy. Like, yea it's shitty, but there was a lot more hate toward the community back then. People have grown and changed their views a lot in the years since. If we boycott every single company or individual who ever did anything even remotely homophobic, no matter their actions since, we'd essentially have to be living in a commune growing and making literally everything ourselves. Btw, this same guy is the one who developed JavaScript and I don't see even remotely the same level of hate for that, so it really feels like people are just being selectively upset.

Cryptocurrency

It's opt-in. It asks you once, and then never again. It was developed at a time when crypto was popular and was a feature people wanted. It was seen as a good thing when it first came out. Public opinion on crypto has soured, but plenty of people who wanted it still use the feature on brave. They have no good reason to scrap it. Especially because, again, it's opt-in only. Don't like it? Cool, don't use it. They aren't pushing it on you. But people hear the word crypto and immediately break out the pitchforks.

Do you even know what the goal of their cryptocurrency was? I think it's safe to say its failed at this point, but the goal was to completely rework how ads function on the internet. It would have killed the modern advertisement methods where ads are shoved in your face and you get nothing for it. Instead, it would have directly paid you a tiny amount any time you saw an ad, with you being able to choose how many you saw, or even if you saw any at all. Then you'd either be able to either keep the money for yourself, or donate it to websites/content creators of your choice. Take away the crypto part of it, and that's actually a pretty admirable goal in my book.

Ad affiliate links

Brave's biggest, actual, controversy is that they replaced some affiliate links with their own. Specifically links to binance.us, which is a crypto market. When it was found, Brave changed their code extremely quickly and claimed it was a bug. Now, companies have often lied through their teeth and claimed malicious actions were a "mistake" or a "bug", so maybe that is the same case here. But considering it was one site only, it was fixed almost immediately, and when you look at how it was actually replacing links (suggested auto fill in the address bar, pulled from browsing history) I am leaning toward it actually being unintentional.

Conclusion

I think people just like to hate things, and will find any reason to continue to do so as long as their little corner of the internet tells them they should hate it. People most vocal with their complaints rarely take the time to dig into the facts and see if it's really as bad as they claim; or they fully know it's not as bad, but never want to let the truth get in the way of a good ol' fashion, hate-boner, circle-jerk.

Is Brave the best browser? Hahahaha no. It's still a chromium fork and has been a little too eager to integrate AI in my opinion. But it's FAR from the worst and is the probably the best privacy focused browser for those that don't understand technology and struggle to use third-party ad-ons. It's just a little ridiculous that while there are legitimate things to complain about, most people's arguments seem to always stem from the 3 topics above.

Now cue the downvotes because I'm clearly some crypto fascist boot-licker for daring to believe "nuance" isn't a made up word.

[–] Warl0k3@lemmy.world 49 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (9 children)

A couple points: Brendan Eich, the one that made the prop-8 donation, is the current CEO of Brave, not just "one of the guys involved". In a related problem, I find it a little difficult to believe that someone who doesn't still hold their anti-gay views would be quite so eager to take cash from Peter Thiel (via his Firm Founder Fund) and I especially do not want to be involved with a browser supported by Thiel when the terms of his investment are private (like, does he have access to brave's user data? We'd like to think no, but boy are they shaking hands with the devil while asking us to trust them.)

Another big piece of criticism that was excluded: Brave created a bunch of profiles for content creators without telling them then used those to solicit donations on behalf of those content creators, then not only refused to refund users who were deceived they kept all the money they said would go to the content creators.

I think people just like to hate things, and will find any reason to continue to do so as long as their little corner of the internet tells them they should hate it.

Trying to present aspects of this as overblown is possibly true - their affiliate link scam was just to binance.us and that gets left out of a lot of this, but at the same time that's a damned difficult thing to sell as just having been a mistake when it was auto-replacing the links to something they were the beneficiaries of.

Btw, this same guy is the one who developed JavaScript and I don’t see even remotely the same level of hate for that, so it really feels like people are just being selectively upset.

Well sure, but he's not actively the CEO of javascript, and as far as I'm aware hasn't ever been involved with javascript since it was rolled into the OpenJS Foundation.

(Also: Brendan Eich shared a bunch of covid conspiracy theory / misinformation stuff. Sure that's a minor point, absolutely everyone sure was doing that back then and why should we judge, but still it's not a great look.)

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[–] fizzle@quokk.au 36 points 1 day ago

Wow this is so... sane.

Being childish and reductive I wanted to downvote anything supporting Brave, but I find you've challenged my views on this.

That said, I think I'm just going to re-frame my dislike for Brave users by assuming they're all crypto-weirdos.

[–] PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world 15 points 1 day ago

That's really well said.

In the end they are just browsers. It's great to have people that inform others and lead them to better alternatives and Firefox has many of them who are very passionate. But then many of them are way too passionate.

[–] Gerudo@lemmy.zip 10 points 1 day ago

Calm down with this logical and thought-out response.

[–] PsychoWiz@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago

I agree with you on all these. The only problem I have with Brave is they choose to exclusively shit on Firefox recently as their marketing strategy, while there are apparently much much bigger fish to fry. I thought their whole mission is to stop people from using Chrome, not another way more privacy focused browser.

[–] Yondoza@sh.itjust.works 5 points 1 day ago

Appreciate the write up!

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[–] pimento64@sopuli.xyz 52 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (13 children)

Which it isn't, and also Chromium sucks, so they're really just mag dumping into their foot

[–] SteelEmpire@anarchist.nexus 38 points 1 day ago (3 children)

The web sucks, because of Google's EEE approach with Chromium; there just isn't a good way to use the web anymore. I use librewolf, it's okay.

[–] Dojan@pawb.social 16 points 1 day ago

Google really needs to be kicked out of the W3C and have Chrome taken from them.

[–] rumba@lemmy.zip 6 points 1 day ago

Yup librewolf for all the stuff I can. Google Meet has all kinds of wierd problems on firefox, especially in Linux. Whne you're hosting you can't share just one tab with sound and in linux getting the video/mic to authorize is hit or miss and takes a good 20 seconds on my boxes to authorize even when it works.

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[–] takeda@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 1 day ago

While I'm sure you are right I think Brave also likely pays for maintaining opinion on social media and posting positive comments supporting it. Many others learned of doing that (for example musk has bots astroturfing its image pretty much everywhere.) Similarly for example you don't see controversies section about Brave.

[–] HalifaxJones@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Can anyone reccomend good options fo browsers?

These are all the browsers I personally think are good and privacy-respecting. Sorry if I accidentally included too many options.

Desktop

Firefox-Based

Firefox

The standard for browsers where you aren't the product. For maximum privacy it does require tweaking settings, but it is reasonably privacy-friendly out of the box. It has light customization options including a sidebar and customizable button placement, and can be much more heavily customized with user themes.

Librewolf (Most reccomended for privacy)

A custom version of Firefox with enhanced privacy by default. Comes with Ublock Origin installed.

Waterfox

A Firefox-based browser with some additional privacy features, enhanced speed, and additional features.

Floorp

A browser based on Firefox with much more advanced customization options and many additional features, like workspaces and web panels. Doesn't add any additional privacy-focused features. They recently also added support for chrome extensions. This is my personal choice of browser (with the Natsumi modification).

Zen Browser

A Firefox-based browser with a sidebar+workspace workflow, and lots of stylistic changes and customizations that help put the focus on the webpage. Very nice and usable for productivity, but doesn't add any additional privacy-focused features.

Chromium-Based

Ungoogled Chromium

It's Chromium, but without Google. Pretty self-explanatory, it's simple, and it works.

Vivaldi

An extremely customizable browser packed with a massive quantity of additional features that can be toggled and tweaked for varying needs and methods of usage. It supports MV2 extensions.

Helium

A chromium-based browser with enhanced privacy and speed. Comes with Ublock Origin pre-installed, and supports MV2 extensions. It's a pretty new project.

Android

Firefox-Based

Firefox

The de-facto privacy-friendly browser, although for maximum privacy it does require tweaking settings. It (and its forks) are the only privacy-friendly browsers on android that support extensions.

Waterfox

A fork of Firefox with more private defaults, and extra bloat removed.

IronFox

A hardened private Firefox fork. Heavily focused on privacy and security, it sacrifices some usability for privacy.

Chromium-based

Cromite (Most reccomended for privacy)

A chromium fork with enhanced privacy and built-in ad blocking.

Vivaldi

Very customizable chromium-based browser. It does not come with an ad-blocker.

iOSAll browsers on iOS are limited to the WebKit engine which Safari is built on, so just use Safari. The benefits of other browsers on iOS are negligible.

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