← Back to context Comment by partiallypro 23 days ago That's pretty irrelevant isn't it? Shouldn't all users demand privacy, especially from ads? 6 comments partiallypro Reply dotcoma 23 days ago All users should demand privacy, but they don’t.Take a look at Firefox’s market share, or Brave’s etc. JumpCrisscross 23 days ago Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?Gecko, WebKit and—hopefully—Ladybird are the true alternatives. I used to think this was too extreme. But the ad vendor dragging ad blockers out of the engine flipped my view. riffraff 23 days ago Brave has its own ad blocker engine built-in rather than as an extension, and it can reuse uBlock's listshttps://github.com/brave/adblock-rustI use brave on my phone and I can't really tell the difference from desktop browser+UO, so I guess it works well enough. dotcoma 23 days ago Brave, like Vivaldi, I think, have developed their own ad blocker.No idea if they will fight to keep UBlock Origin accessible or not.I think and certainly hope that Helium will fight the good fight. pseudalopex 23 days ago > Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?They said they could offer limited MV2 support even after it’s fully removed from the upstream Chromium codebase.[1][1] https://brave.com/blog/brave-shields-manifest-v3/
dotcoma 23 days ago All users should demand privacy, but they don’t.Take a look at Firefox’s market share, or Brave’s etc. JumpCrisscross 23 days ago Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?Gecko, WebKit and—hopefully—Ladybird are the true alternatives. I used to think this was too extreme. But the ad vendor dragging ad blockers out of the engine flipped my view. riffraff 23 days ago Brave has its own ad blocker engine built-in rather than as an extension, and it can reuse uBlock's listshttps://github.com/brave/adblock-rustI use brave on my phone and I can't really tell the difference from desktop browser+UO, so I guess it works well enough. dotcoma 23 days ago Brave, like Vivaldi, I think, have developed their own ad blocker.No idea if they will fight to keep UBlock Origin accessible or not.I think and certainly hope that Helium will fight the good fight. pseudalopex 23 days ago > Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?They said they could offer limited MV2 support even after it’s fully removed from the upstream Chromium codebase.[1][1] https://brave.com/blog/brave-shields-manifest-v3/
JumpCrisscross 23 days ago Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?Gecko, WebKit and—hopefully—Ladybird are the true alternatives. I used to think this was too extreme. But the ad vendor dragging ad blockers out of the engine flipped my view. riffraff 23 days ago Brave has its own ad blocker engine built-in rather than as an extension, and it can reuse uBlock's listshttps://github.com/brave/adblock-rustI use brave on my phone and I can't really tell the difference from desktop browser+UO, so I guess it works well enough. dotcoma 23 days ago Brave, like Vivaldi, I think, have developed their own ad blocker.No idea if they will fight to keep UBlock Origin accessible or not.I think and certainly hope that Helium will fight the good fight. pseudalopex 23 days ago > Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?They said they could offer limited MV2 support even after it’s fully removed from the upstream Chromium codebase.[1][1] https://brave.com/blog/brave-shields-manifest-v3/
riffraff 23 days ago Brave has its own ad blocker engine built-in rather than as an extension, and it can reuse uBlock's listshttps://github.com/brave/adblock-rustI use brave on my phone and I can't really tell the difference from desktop browser+UO, so I guess it works well enough.
dotcoma 23 days ago Brave, like Vivaldi, I think, have developed their own ad blocker.No idea if they will fight to keep UBlock Origin accessible or not.I think and certainly hope that Helium will fight the good fight.
pseudalopex 23 days ago > Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?They said they could offer limited MV2 support even after it’s fully removed from the upstream Chromium codebase.[1][1] https://brave.com/blog/brave-shields-manifest-v3/
All users should demand privacy, but they don’t.
Take a look at Firefox’s market share, or Brave’s etc.
Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?
Gecko, WebKit and—hopefully—Ladybird are the true alternatives. I used to think this was too extreme. But the ad vendor dragging ad blockers out of the engine flipped my view.
Brave has its own ad blocker engine built-in rather than as an extension, and it can reuse uBlock's lists
https://github.com/brave/adblock-rust
I use brave on my phone and I can't really tell the difference from desktop browser+UO, so I guess it works well enough.
Brave, like Vivaldi, I think, have developed their own ad blocker.
No idea if they will fight to keep UBlock Origin accessible or not.
I think and certainly hope that Helium will fight the good fight.
> Won’t Brave follow Google’s lead on this?
They said they could offer limited MV2 support even after it’s fully removed from the upstream Chromium codebase.[1]
[1] https://brave.com/blog/brave-shields-manifest-v3/