Alright, trying to leave both Chrome and Firefox at the same time is difficult, especially because I always use multiple browsers at the same time (to separate accounts for this or that without having to switch accounts constantly). My current browser number three is Opera and so far, I’m not touching it (we’ll see in the future).
My questions are basically: are LibreWolf and Vivaldi viable replacements as main browsers?
My main concerns are whether LibreWolf is mature enough and if both allow syncing between different devices (as I regularly use three computers).
Any constructive feedback is welcome.
(suggesting me to use that another browser I haven’t mentioning without explaining why in detail is not constructive feedback, thank you)
#internet #browsers #webbrowser #Chrome #Firefox #LibreWolf #Vivaldi
Vivaldi is just Chrome. Opera is just Chrome.
Firefox forks just simply don’t have the manpower to update as rapidly as browsers need updating on the web today.
So your only real option right now is Firefox unless you just want a differently skinned Google browser, or a less-secure Firefox fork.
Firefox has containers you can make to keep accounts separate, and colors your tab based on the container it’s using.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/multi-account-containers/
In what way? I switched to LibreWolf a few months ago and haven’t noticed anything. But admittedly I’m not asking much of it.
Say there’s a Zero-day exploit that gets found. LibreWolf is going to rely on Firefox to patch it, they aren’t going to have the resources and manpower to patch it themselves. That means they will always be behind.
Forks of the main project almost always lag behind the main project unless they somehow spin off and put more money/manpower into the project than the original author; and LibreWolf sure isn’t doing that.
Additionally, depending on how they plan to operate - their fork could slowly drift away from the original firefox fork, meaning more and more of their codebase has to be maintained by their team with respect to security. This means more potential for their own unique security flaws.
Mozilla/Firefox isn’t selling your data. This habit of Lemmy users to freak out and jump ship over every little thing is just silly.
.so I should just switch back?
Only if you’re paranoid about security. It should be fine, generally.
I’m not, but also not sure what the benefit of LibreFox really is.
@[email protected]
@[email protected] @[email protected]
the question is how do we get a fork enough developers that they can support themselves independantly
exactly this. This is the best we will have under capitalism.
Could we leave the political shit out of this?
That’s economics
lol it is just the reality. The system is built around profit, that’s it.