The Best Web Browsers for Privacy

The Best Web Browsers for Privacy

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Channel Avatar The Linux Experiment2023-06-21 15:58:19 Thumbnail
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#privacy #linux #webbrowser

00:00 Intro
00:37 Sponsor: Proton Mail, the private and encrypted email service
01:51 What’s Browser Privacy
03:03 Google Chrome
05:14 Mozilla Firefox & LibreWolf
07:11 Brave
09:14 Tor Browser
10:51 Microsoft Edge
11:57 Opera
12:56 Vivaldi
14:07 What should you use?
15:05 Sponsor: Get a PC that was made to run Linux
16:02 Support the channel

So, Chrome is THE most used browser in the world, on mobile, and on desktop. Out of the box, it doesn’t have an ad blocker, or a tracker blocker enabled. To use that browser to the fullest, you’ll also need to use a Google Account, and thus everything you do in your browser will be collected unless you specifically disable it.

You can disable a lot of things in your Google account and the web browser settings, but you’ll need to download extensions to block the most invasive trackers and limit fingerprinting. Chrome is also not open source.

On Privacy tests.org, we can also see that Chrome has weak fingerprinting resistance.

Firefox has a good reputation for privacy, but it’s not the best choice either. By default, it collects telemetry data, including how many tabs you have open, how many windows, how many webpages you visit, the number and type of extensions, duration of your browsing sessions, and some technical data on your OS, the version of the browser, the language, and your IP address in their server logs. Firefox can also use this data to recommend extensions to you.

In terms of protections, Firefox doesn’t block tracking scripts or pixels but it does block social media trackers, cross site cookies, cryptominers, plus all tracking when you’re in incognito mode. Firefox is open source, so you can be reasonably sure that it doesn’t collect more than what it tells you.

If you like Firefox but you don’t want the telemetry, and you want improved fingerprinting protection, then there’s Librewolf.

Brave offers a lot of what you’d be able to do in another browser with extensions, but it does so out of the box. They call them /”shields/

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