

I’m spread out across Waterfox, Ironfox, Brave and Vivaldi.
For FF forks, don’t neglect extensions like JShelter. They make a difference as well.
I’m spread out across Waterfox, Ironfox, Brave and Vivaldi.
For FF forks, don’t neglect extensions like JShelter. They make a difference as well.
Nice idea, but it’ll get flagged if you do too much going back in time.
Revive and delete all media, then delete the account. In practice, it likely doesn’t mean much, but it does technically mean you sort of “deny further permissions” to use the data you left there. Again, IRL they’ll use it anyway.
Also, don’t leave an account associated with your name there to possibly get hacked years from now and abuse any connections you have.
Also an option if it’s not tied to your name, revive it and sell it. Aged accounts can be worth about $50+ to sell to scammers.
But we’re taking about this in the context of this infographic. So we have to distill this down to:
Should FF be with, or above, Brave?
I assume we’re also taking about relatively low-barrier changes that most users can implement. So vanilla FF vs vanilla Brave, there’s a difference. Can we harden FF? Sure. Will 95%+ of people do that with Librewolf or 3 dozen other forks out there? Why bother when there’s nuance to be gained with other forks? So now vanilla FF stops being relevant.
And to be clear, I don’t use Brave unless I absolutely have to. I don’t love it, but vs. normie Vanilla FF, there’s a slight edge.
Lol, no. Here’s a list of all the things that panel doesn’t account for.
Also, there’s nothing close to even attempting privacy without strong fingerprint protection anyway, which I should have also mentioned. Vanilla FF allows a bright shining canvas fingerprint that Brave and Librewolf disable.
FF doesnt deserve much better than Brave as it sends telemetry, so both on tier 2. LibreWolf would fit for tier 3 or maaaybe 4.
I’ve done OSINT research and that alone converted me into a privacy advocate. Seeing how Alphabet, Meta, and MS have allowed creep to get training data… Whew. It’s breathtaking and complicated beyond the ability to explain in 114 characters.
Y’all, we are cooked. Currently. Present tense. If you aren’t freaked out already, you’re missing about 85% of reality.
No, the account gets flagged as too many old changes, an indicator of being hacked. Suspended for 6 months is the usual FB policy.