![]() The prompt is subtle, displaying only the source and target languages, and a menu icon. In line with my policy of maximum choice, and for ease of use, here's a 'portable' version of LibreWolf. Whenever Brave users visit a website that is in a foreign language, meaning a language not installed on the users device, Brave offers to translate it. HOWEVER I know some Puppians take online security extremely seriously. I can't get anything done if I spend all my time re-logging in, and resetting everything up the way I want it.! Doesn't work for me, though as far as I'm concerned, that's a complete waste of time. It also appears to be another of these hyper-security versions that won't remember anything, and wants you to re-enter all your information every time you fire it up.īut that's what some people want.TOTAL anonymity. I've never quite got my head round that one, I'll be honest. I believe that's to do with this business of "if you start NOT full-screen, the user-agent trackers can't guess what you're running". Instead it opens repeatedly with some predefined hard-coded size and coordinates. It doesn't seem to store its window size and coordinates. *Well, stumbled into one, then based on its criticism of opera and did some further exploring. Librewolf does fingerprint protection by using Tor Uplift patches, such as Dynamic First Party Isolation and privacy.resistFingerprinting. Homepage Downloads Recommended Configuration These options can be found in Settings. Brave is built upon the Chromium web browser project, so it should feel familiar and have minimal website compatibility issues. Just thought you should have notice of its existence and this link. Brave Brave Browser includes a built-in content blocker and privacy features, many of which are enabled by default. I think I stumbled upon LIbreWolf on the Slant website. ![]() doesn't mention LibreWolf, but does express a concern about my favorite, opera. Although there is more to LibreWolf, the over-all take-away was a security hardened firefox without having to spend time accomplishing that.īut, do your own reading. The only one which was recommended that I previously hadn't tried but could run OOTB under Bionicpup64 was the LibreWolf.AppImage. Palemoon was mentioned as having mixed reviews as was Brave. Compare price, features, and reviews of the software side-by-side to make the best choice for your business. Firefox, itself, was recommended with the proviso that it be hardened. Then come back for an understanding why I built it.Īccidentally stumbled into a couple* of web-pages rating web-browsers from a privacy prospective. Edit: Skip down to here, viewtopic.php?p=11448#p11448 for what may be a version working OOTB.
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