I prefer Librewolf as it is easier and simpler to use

        • Lemongrab
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          253 months ago

          It is a script that automatically changes the internal flags of Firefox (accessed manually through “about:config”) but isn’t a recompile. A fork that uses most of the Arkenfox config is Librewolf.

            • Lemongrab
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              93 months ago

              Arkenfox quite literally is not a fork. It is just changing settings. That is like saying I am making a Firefox fork by changing it to dark theme and changing the default search engine to Bing.

              Arkenfox isn’t a fork, even with a script it is manual for much of it. A fork requires redistributing the code, which for Firefox requires the Dev to change the name and replace icons of the application (to comply with Firefox’s license), which requires modifying the source code and compiling.

              • @delirious_owl@discuss.online
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                -63 months ago

                Taking the latest release and then running a script to patch it with some modifications is the definition of a fork.

                By your logic, Tor Browser isn’t a fork of Firefox.

                • @tetris11@lemmy.ml
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                  53 months ago

                  Tor makes changes to the FF source though for it to run, no?

                  Arkenfox merely makes config changes in FF

                • Wilmo Bones
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                  33 months ago

                  Its not modifying the code, it’s changing existing settings that are already available to be changed to optimal settings for privacy…

                  It is not a fork you are completely wrong.

                • Lemongrab
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                  13 months ago

                  It is not patching Firefox. I already explained this bit I will say it again. No source code is changed, no promo icons, and no recompile is done, therefore it is not a fork. Tor browser does a lot of stuff behind the scenes. Arkenfox is not a fork. Tor browser comes prebundled with “No Script” extension, arkenfox cannot bundle extensions because it literally only copies text from one config file to another. Tor browser patches out the phone home to the Mozilla Add-on Store, Arkenfox literally cannot because it doesn’t modify the code and without recompiling it causes a crash. There are many many more differences between forks of Firefox and Arkenfox, I’ll leave that research for you because I think I have said enough. Arkenfox is not a fork of Firefox by definition, it does not modify any code. It would be like saying “I forked Minecraft” because I create a text file with my fav config of keybinds and settings and then share that config. Arkenfox is just a text file config and a script that modifies the default config of an existing Firefox profile. When you create a new Firefox profile, it is generated as default without Arkenfox settings. Librewolf, which uses much of Arkenfox’s user.js config, must follow the forking guidelines outlined by Mozilla, patches out phone homes, bundles extensions, changes ui, and (crucially) if you create a new profile, it is preconfigured with security and privacy settings.

            • apotheotic (she/her)
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              43 months ago

              My understanding is that this Arkenfox thing is a script that changes the config of your existing Firefox install. A fork would be a version of Firefox you can download that has those changes applied by default upon download.

        • @ahal@lemmy.ca
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          93 months ago

          It’s a template to help set all the security and privacy hardening features that Firefox already ships with but are disabled by default.

        • Simon Müller
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          13 months ago

          Arkenfox is simply a set of configuration you can (and should) apply yourself onto a clean Firefox installation.

          A fork means taking the source code and modifying it directly, not providing an alternative configuration file.

    • @ssm
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      -123 months ago

      Every fork creates fragmentation. Then you get forks of forks. Then you get forks of forks of forks. Eventually, you get a knife, and a spoon, and a spork, maybe even a fpoon. And every fork splits your developer pool in half! And once you’re down to one developer each, the developer splits in half! And then you have no project.

        • @ssm
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          -73 months ago

          No, but cargo-culting Mozilla isn’t ideal.

          • Possibly linuxOP
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            83 months ago

            Forks create options. Only a handful of forks will actually be used.

            • @ssm
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              3 months ago

              Only a handful of forks will actually be used.

              Tell that to Linux lol

              or userspace audio daemons

              or package managers

              or FHS

              or Linux userspace network stacks

              or Linux firewalls

              or init systems & rc managers

              or window managers / desktop environments

              or graphics toolkits

              • Possibly linuxOP
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                133 months ago

                That’s the idea. It is good to have options. Single standards are a bad idea even though they are convenient in the short term.

                • @ssm
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                  -33 months ago

                  Hard disagree. Though I suppose this is the usual big disagreement between linux and bsd users.

      • @pyre@lemmy.world
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        53 months ago

        that’s not how things work. open source projects don’t start with a set amount of developers and start splitting. even if they do, they don’t split in equal parts. if you have 500 developers working on a project, and 10 of them create 8 different forks, that doesn’t really change much.

        some developers may move around, and more developers can join the pool all the time, on any fork. i don’t understand how any of this is a problem.

      • @laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Nice FUD.

        By your own logic, Chrome should have fewer developers than Konqueror, since its engine is essentially a fork of a fork of a fork.