Brave has seen a sharp increase in users installing its privacy-focused Brave Browser on iPhones after Apple introduced changes to adhere to the new European Digital Markets Act.

  • @Technus@lemmy.zip
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    44 months ago

    Remember kids, if it’s Chromium based, it’s still part of the problem. The Chromium project only exists to provide the illusion of choice. Don’t let Google have the power to dictate web standards at will.

    • BrikoXOPM
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      4 months ago

      What’s the alternative? Firefox with their AI bullshit? No thanks, I’ll stick to Vivaldi.

      I lost all respect for Mozilla 7 years ago, when they promised to open source Pocket in accordance to their manifesto, but still haven’t done so to date. If they can’t follow their own manifesto when it doesn’t suite them, they are no better than opportunistic Google.

      • @Technus@lemmy.zip
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        44 months ago

        It sure sounds like they’re working on it: https://discourse.mozilla.org/t/pocket-source-code/43686/13

        Their Github has fresh commits as of 9 hours ago: https://github.com/Pocket/pocket-monorepo

        As an engineer, I can tell you that the slow progress is almost certainly not out of malice. When choosing between busywork like this and working on actual product features, 9 times out of 10 any project manager will prioritize the product. They’ve got to keep the lights on, just like everyone else.

        Meanwhile, by their own admission, more of the code in Vivaldi, that’s not just Chromium, is closed-source than open:

        Roughly 92% of the browser’s code is open source coming from Chromium, 3% is open source coming from us, which leaves only 5% for our UI closed-source code.

        Though it is obfuscated Javascript so it’s technically feasible to reverse-engineer and modify, it’s still under a proprietary license.

        Also, just like Chromium, there’s other browsers out there based on Firefox:

        Don’t think for one second that Google is keeping Chromium open-source out of the goodness of their hearts. Once Firefox and Safari are out of the picture (it might be unthinkable for Apple to surrender and join the cult, but that’s what we all thought about Microsoft and Internet Explorer), what incentive do they have to keep Chromium at feature-parity with Chrome?

        • BrikoXOPM
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          4 months ago

          I’m well aware of their claims that they are working on it, but when asked to reaffirm their promise, they bailed. See https://github.com/Pocket/extension-save-to-pocket/issues/75#issuecomment-662564315

          As an engineer, I can tell you that the slow progress is almost certainly not out of malice. When choosing between busywork like this and working on actual product features, 9 times out of 10 any project manager will prioritize the product. They’ve got to keep the lights on, just like everyone else.

          And that is perfectly fine in most cases, but not when it contradicts their own manifesto. We are not asking for the moon, just for them to follow their own set standard… You can read it here https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/.

          Vivaldi was never open source and never claimed to be open source. I’m aware of that. And while I would love for them to go the FOSS route, they do adopt a lot of FOSS principles in how they manage the company behind it. They don’t act as if they are above reproach, unlike Mozilla. They are not perfect, but as it stand their record is better than Mozilla’s.

          I would love to use a Firefox fork, but they are all developed by small groups of contributors, which is just not viable from a security standpoint. I came close to switching with Mullvad Browser, but’s a bit too limited for my daily use.

          Google is evil, you don’t have to convince me. And they have full control over Chromium, but the reason the code is open source is regulators. They can use that as an argument that they are not a monopoly. And if Mozilla/Apple were to disappear, it would become even more important to keep Chromium open to keep regulators away. That is one lesson they learned from the United States v. Microsoft Corp. (2001) case when US still had regulations.