> audit despite it being open source already > Unless you procure some audit that is NOT by Brave itself, keep barking up the wrong tree matey :^) Nice sources you have there.ĥ0 million+ users and rapid growth also prove that Brave just doesn’t work. The sources posted here are unrelated (gorhill only talks about extension limitations not applicable to native adblockers) or FUD (Brave whitelisting trackers is just not true). > But Brave is not an option, as it doesn’t work, as previous independent posters already co-confirmed with various sources. > You: Impressive rant you procured in such a short time. Brave’s internal adblocker used by 50 million people worldwide has hurt Google more in one year than 5 million uBO users ever will. Native adblockers have their purpose, deal with it. PS: When Mozilla adopts Manifest V3, which they probably will due to cross-browser extension compatibility, you are screwed. I invite anyone interested to do their own research on the subject, as always. Just because you are many fans of uBlock Origin / Firefox around here does not mean what you say is anywhere near true. The replies I’ve gotten were full of shit, utterly hypocritical, and oftentimes factually wrong. They just say “in strict mode websites can break” and let you chose.įact VII: In reality, Firefox does not set the tracking protection to “Strict” by default for compatibility reasons. > AFAIK Firefox tracking protection devs doesn’t make such sneaky move “for compatibility”. Even Saint Gorhill understands this, which is why uBlock Origin is not blocking the scripts in question either by default, you *. In truth, you can’t block each and every script on these pages, as basic functionality breaks. > I wont add much because people already gave good arguments but i’ll just leave this hereįact VI: Brave does not allow Facebook / Twitter / Google trackers, nor is there any kind of monetary agreement between Brave and these companies. Show me the default adblocker of Firefox that is somewhat similar to uBlock Origin or Brave’s adblocker, then. > Whatever Martin’s posts cover, we can reliably expect your never-ending agitation against Mozilla. > Brave is, after all, owned by an advertising company, and not being able to detect ads impacts their business modelįact IV: Mozilla receives 80%+ of its annual revenue from Google, the biggest ad company in the world.įact V: Mozilla does not implement a local ad delivery system that would hurt Google’s revenue. Brave’s ads are also opt-in and the browser doesn’t show its own ads by default.įact III: Websites do not lose any more revenue via Brave than they would via uBlock Origin or any other adblocker. > Brave added an adblocker for one reason – to be able to detect ads in order to be able to replace them.įact II: Brave does not replace ads on websites, Brave’s ads are system notifications. My point still stands, what you say does not disprove it at all. > Enhanced Tracking Protection is a tracker blocker, not an ad blocker – the name should give you a clue, but yeah, let’s be disingenuousįirefox’s tracker blocking tracking blocking exists because they are too afraid to include an adblocker similar to uBlock Origin, Brave etc. Those API limitations are not applicable to native adblockers (like the one in Brave) as native adblockers are not extensions… For example, Brave does CNAME uncloaking: > I guess the developer of uBlock Origin knows more about the subject than you:įact I: This article just cites the extension API limitations of Chromium. The Firefox version of uBlock Origin is considered the version that offers the best protection, as it supports protection against CNAME tracking, which the Chrome versions do not offer. To name a few improvements: blocking WebRTC from leaking IP addresses, removing elements permanently from webpages, blocking JavaScript by default, and addressing new tracking methods, such as CNAME tracking, Hill improved the extension over the years, adding features and improvements to it on a regular basis. The extension was created after Hill left the uBlock project that he created. The uBlock Origin extension was first published on Mozilla's extensions store in April 2015 by its creator Raymond Hill, known as gorhill online. As far as the number of reviews is concerned: uBlock Origin received more than 13200 reviews, thousands more than Adblock Plus' 8500 reviews at the time of writing. The average rating is 4.8 out of 5 on the Mozilla add-ons store, while Adblock Plus has a rating of 4.5 out of 5. UBlock Origin beats Adblock Plus in other metrics as well.
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