![]() As an Android phone user, I’m already informing Google about my location (even with location history off, Google periodically pings my device’s location), my mobile gaming and app usage, my YouTube-watching habits, and my chronic failure to get off Twitter. The reason is a sentiment you’ll have heard expressed quite often in recent times: I’m growing less and less comfortable with having Google know more and more about me. ![]() What’s more, it’s just one of a growing number of really good options that aren’t made by Google.īefore I get too far into my Chrome avoidance methodology, a word on why I’m trying to escape Google’s browser. ![]() If your reasons for sticking with Chrome have been (a) extensions, (b) compatibility, (c) syncing across devices, or (d, unlikely) speed, Brave checks all of those boxes. This year, I’m pretty sure I’ve found the ideal Chrome alternative in the Brave browser. So I returned to Chrome after a few weeks of Firefox, but the urge to decouple my browsing habits from Google remained. It wasn’t compatible with everything the way Chrome was, its extensions were different, and, for my way of using a browser, it was slower and less responsive. As much as I liked where Firefox was going, however, I couldn’t stick with it over the long term. Readers of this august website may recall that a year ago, I lauded Firefox and its progress toward becoming a genuine alternative to Google’s dominant Chrome browser.
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