I do have an idea how “a difficult to kill, unwanted growth” could be put into relation to a war fueled by hatred.
I do have an idea how “a difficult to kill, unwanted growth” could be put into relation to a war fueled by hatred.
How does GrapheneOS “lack boldly”?
Because they want their voice chats to be monitored?
Where do you get all these Coca Cola flavours? I’m in Germany and have only ever seen vanilla, lemon, cherry and life (next to the default, light and zero).
Your comment kinda reads like an ad.
I do think it’s desirable. It’s unnecessary for users to keep track of which tool is best for which purpose if one tool can do it all. There’s no reason why one tool wouldn’t be able to; even in the worst case it could just automatically choose the best tool to answer your prompt, saving you the trouble of doing so.
A single tool isn’t going to meet all those needs yet
All 3 systems use openssl and get attacked using Heartbleed.
(And even if they don’t reuse even a single piece of code, attackers can still just use multiple exploits.)
doesn’t want to mess with what she is familiar with
That does make change difficult.
I recently (two months ago) had to work with an Excel sheet which worked on OnlyOffice but not LibreOffice. So compatibility seems to still not be on par.
why would a noun have a past tense
I knew it was bad
I’m not sure whether this comment is supposed to speak of Kagi in a positive or negative way.
I’ve read the article and I don’t understand the issue.
The founder is a homophobe
I don’t care. He represents Brave just as little as he represents Mozilla or Javascript.
It didn’t do ad replacements
I don’t care. Why should that be a reason not to use the browser? It doesn’t have a feature that no other browser has either, oh no.
Setting up a system to turn BAT into money isn’t worth it for websites, since not enough people use Brave to generate relevant revenue
I don’t care. If you care about maximizing websites’ profit, you should use Chrome (with no adblock).
It’s bloated with Web3 stuff
I don’t care. Browsers are extremely bloated anyways.
They partnered with Web3 companies
I don’t care. They didn’t try to scam anyone, they just offered services/features for those interested in Web3.
They added affiliate codes to URLs
I care a little, but not much. Claiming it’s anti privacy is ridiculous. The website can see you’re using Brave no matter whether you’re using an affiliate link or not. But it’s still something a browser definitely shouldn’t do without user consent (and an option to opt out).
Cromite is an alternative