So as the title mentions, I’m wondering how much is too much?

I am currently using Brave with the setting to:

  • Aggressively block trackers & ads
  • Only connect with HTTPS
  • Block fingerprinting
  • Block cross-site cookies

In addition to that, I have installed the following extensions:

  • uBlock Origin
  • Ghostery
  • Decentraleyes
  • DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials

So my question is: Is this overkill? If so, what should/could be removed that may be redundant? I want as much coverage as possible, but not have things bloated.

  • @9point6
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    21 year ago

    Have you never heard of a boycott?

    I’ve said why I think he’s bad, therefore I boycott him and his product. There are other people out there doing exactly the same.

    I’m not really sure how you’re struggling with this

    • @Ogygus
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      11 year ago

      How are you thinking of stopping a free product.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        You know they still profit from the product right? How the fuck else would they continue to exist?

        • @Ogygus
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          11 year ago

          The ads, that you can choose to hide, and donations.

      • @9point6
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        11 year ago

        Okay, one last time, but I’ve said all this before in fewer words:

        Brave is owned by a for-profit company that makes money from its users. One of the ways it does this is the ad credits system on the new tab page (there’s probably other ways, I’ve not looked into it too hard)

        If it doesn’t have enough users (market share) to sustain the company or if they can’t sell the ad space, the company doesn’t make enough money to sustain itself and has to do something or fold. If the company folds development stops, the product stagnates and basically dies.

        The company might decide to kick out the CEO if enough people are boycotting for the same reasons, that would resolve the issue too.

        But yeah I don’t even care about the software, I just don’t want to support the company and therefore the CEO, so I won’t use its product. Otherwise known as a boycott

        There’s not really much else to say about it

        • @Ogygus
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          11 year ago

          As i said in another comment:

          Be honest and admit that you not using it the product won’t change anything, you just want to have the warm fuzzy feeling of “sticking it to the man” without doing anything.

          And finally, you admitted it.

          But i have a singular, most concerning word for you: Donations.

          There are people who pay for software (lol) and will keep things afloat for quite a while.

          • @9point6
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            1 year ago

            Look, if that’s how you define a boycott, then be my guest I guess. A bit off the mark but I guess I’m clearly lacking the ability to get it across to you. No fuzzy feeling, maybe avoiding a vague shitty feeling I’d have for using it.

            Donations require users, if all the users boycott then they get no donations.

            Or maybe look at the inverse, the company is losing out on potential donations by users boycotting, whether significant or not. Same goes for ad impressions, etc

            • @Ogygus
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              11 year ago

              Donations require ONE user (with a big donation).

              You are doing this just to feel a bit better. But it won’t change brave marketshare in the slightest.

        • @9point6 @Ogygus Brave is owned by a for-profit company that makes money from its users. Isn’t this true for most browsers? The fact that you speak of ‘market share’ implies profit for somebody at some point. In most cases Google, Microsoft, Apple, Mozilla or somebody. Good for you for deciding who you want to support, but you make it sound like there is something wrong with it being owned by some corp…when the same is true for everything else

          • @9point6
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            11 year ago

            Ah sorry, that’s not what I intended that part to mean, I wasn’t saying brave was particularly unique in that fashion, just that it has a company that develops it, which makes money from its market share.

            Trying to explain to the other person how a boycott is still a thing for products that are free.