I’m also greatly concerned by the Chromium engine supremacy on the Internet.
There are interesting privacy-focused Chromium-based browsers but I still refuse to use them. Google shouldn’t have a near-monopoly on web rendering engines and on web “standards”. Firefox is the only proper competition I can get behind.
I’m okay with Safari on macOS, Web (Epiphany) on GNOME, or Konqueror. However, all three use the same WebKit engine, so there’s really only three major engines: Blink, Gecko, and WebKit. I’ll get behind either of the latter two (I use Firefox, I recommend both Firefox and Safari to coworkers on macOS).
The real crime here is downloading Chrome.
Firefox, for privacy protection.
I’m also greatly concerned by the Chromium engine supremacy on the Internet.
There are interesting privacy-focused Chromium-based browsers but I still refuse to use them. Google shouldn’t have a near-monopoly on web rendering engines and on web “standards”. Firefox is the only proper competition I can get behind.
I’m okay with Safari on macOS, Web (Epiphany) on GNOME, or Konqueror. However, all three use the same WebKit engine, so there’s really only three major engines: Blink, Gecko, and WebKit. I’ll get behind either of the latter two (I use Firefox, I recommend both Firefox and Safari to coworkers on macOS).
Firefox is great, but :has (a CSS selector supported by WebKit but not Gecko) is starting to get a lot more popular.