• teft
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    451 year ago

    You should switch from chrome to firefox. Less tracking built in to the browser. Also chrome is planning to deprecate manifest V2 which will break all adblockers.

    • @unphazed
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      21 year ago

      Will this affect vanced?

    • @claymore
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      11 year ago

      adguard does have a MV2 compliant ad blocker but I’ll still use Firefox lol

      • teft
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        11 year ago

        Adguard is russian spyware. Also it wouldn’t matter if they have a manifest v2 compliant addon as manifest v2 is going away in less than a year. Manifest V3 breaks adblockers.

        • @claymore
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          11 year ago

          I meant MV3 compliant, got it mixed up, also russian spyware???

          • teft
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            1 year ago

            Yes, they were developed in Russia and moved to Cyprus a few years later. Their software also installs a root certificate so that’s fun. Here is a primer on why that’s a bad thing. You should use ublock origin if you care about adblocking and privacy.

            • @claymore
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              11 year ago

              well damn, I’ve been using adguard for well over 3 months now, thanks for the heads up I’ll install ublock origins

              • teft
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                31 year ago

                When you uninstall it make sure you go find that root cert and verify it was deleted as well. You don’t want that hanging out on your system as it can be used to compromise your security via man in the middle attacks.

    • R0cket_M00se
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      01 year ago

      Unless you use a browser that uses its own ad and tracker blocking. I get fewer ads on Vivaldi without adblocking then I get on Firefox with ublock origin.

      Runs about half the resources that Firefox takes up too.

      Ad block on chromium was supposed to break in January when manifest v3 came around and it doesn’t seem like much has changed on browsers that were prepared for it like Brave and V.

      Edge and Chrome are fucked, but who cares about them anyways.

      • @Bazoogle
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        161 year ago

        I used vivaldi for a period, but it’s still Chromium. I’m trying to support the only non-chromium option out there. The more users Firefox has, the better. Chrome and Chromium are so dominant, it’s seriously problematic.

      • @cowmouse
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        121 year ago

        Unless you were running Firefx with outdated uBO filters, I doubt that. Vivaldi is a memory hog for me.

        • R0cket_M00se
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          21 year ago

          Strange, it’s literally half of Firefox with equivalent tabs.

          • @cowmouse
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            31 year ago

            What platform? Extensions? Any about:config changes?

            • R0cket_M00se
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              1 year ago

              Windows 10, 3200MHz CL16 32GB, Ryzen 5 3600XT.

              Extensions on Vivaldi are Bandcamp volume control, Bing unchained, and tubebuddy.

              Extensions on Fox: Firefox color, DDG privacy essentials, Ublock Origin.

              Same tabs open on each browser.

              YouTube, Spotify, Lemmy.world, and FB messenger.

              Methodology: played YouTube videos in each with all other tabs idle to ensure they were actively using system resources.

              FF: 1361MB (active) V: 764MB (active)

              That’s literally half. Also Firefox never seems to want to give back RAM, whereas Vivaldi drops back down by a factor of 1/7 when the video is paused. Fox only managed to give up a measly 60ish MB of it’s 1361.

              FF: 1306MB (idle) V: 628MB (Idle)

              Edit: I believe ublock being installed on FF is justified since I find the native ad blocking of Vivaldi to be just as good, namely in YouTube which is my primary concern. If you want an AdBlock free test that only wins points in Vivaldi’s favor for packaging it into the browser.

              • @cowmouse
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                1 year ago

                I just tried it and Firefox ESR uses ~800MB with a bing tab, a youtube tab focused and playing a video, a lemmy tab and a github tab. I’m running it on GNU/Linux, and I toggled dom.suspend_inactive.enabled in about:config. Edit: it also doesn’t really matter how much RAM it uses, it’ll unload tabs if the system is low on memory. Firefox is also faster for me.