If you are keen on personal privacy, you might have come across Brave Browser. Brave is a Chromium-based browser that promises to deliver privacy with built-in ad-blocking and content-blocking protection. It also offers several quality-of-life features and services, like a VPN and Tor access. I mean, it’s even listed on the reputable PrivacyTools website. Why am I telling you to steer clear of this browser, then?
I was pretty confused when reading because it sounded like you were thanking me for calling our far right BS from the person was talking to, but I was calling our far left BS instead.
But after a couple paragraphs, I realized it was me you were talking about. So thank you for giving me a chance to see this and respond.
Everything here is incorrect. I’m not being paid, I’m not far right (I hate Trump and voted for Biden in 2020), and I call out far right BS all the time (had an argument w/ my boss the other day who supported Trump’s tariff and immigration policy).
I’ve tried to cover all of them, but my posts get long as is, so I try to combine a few. I don’t follow Brave news much, so I’ll miss some things.
If I donated to an intolerant PAC or something, sure, I’d get that. If I bought products from a corporation that openly funds intolerant PACs with a large chunk of profits, I’d get that as well.
But if the CEO uses their personal money on it, I have more trouble connecting that with the company. As long as they keep personal opinions personal and don’t drag the company into it, I’m fine. The VP seems worse than him honestly (from the article).
A CEO is not the company, and if you disable ads, don’t use their search engine, and don’t engage with their crypto nonsense, you’re not giving them any money. I do all of that for the handful of minutes each day I use it.
I use Firefox as my main browser, and that’s what I recommend to others. I use Brave as my backup browser, because I need something that runs on the Chromium engine that doesn’t have ads. I think people are overreacting about Eich. I disagree with his politics, but as long as he keeps that outside the company, I’m okay with it.
I assume you’re talking about the referral link thing? Yeah, that was bad, and I think I mentioned that. At least they quickly reversed course.
I can see an argument for them thinking it wasn’t that bad, so I’m willing to chalk it up to naïveté. It wasn’t quite as bad as Honey, which removed other referral codes. It’s still bad.
I didn’t hear that it caused performance issues though.
I never claimed they were equivalent. I merely pointed to them as fairly unpopular things that I support, and gave reasons for it.
And I agree, they can absolutely cause problems in marriage, as well as non-married people (addiction is real), hence why I said they are “bad.” But “bad” doesn’t necessarily have to mean “illegal.”
I have never used drugs, gambled, or hired a prostitute, and I don’t think anyone else should, but I will absolutely support legalizing them. In fact, I’m quite religious, and those things are 100% against my religion, but I believe personal morality shouldn’t really impact politics. My religion and moral code is for me, and I’m not going to force that on anyone.
In short, I support these probably for the same reason you oppose Eich: I believe in freedom. I guess I define that a bit more liberally than you do.
Teslas are burning as a symbol of opposition to Musk and DOGE. And I completely respect that, I also don’t like Musk and DOGE.
That said, this isn’t going to change anything. Musk has enough money that even if Tesla disappears, he’ll still be filthy rich. He does seem to care about the “richest man in the world” title, so I guess it will hurt his ego a little.
The ones that’ll suffer more are regular people who bought a Tesla years ago and are getting caught in the crossfire. Some idiots will burn privately owned Teslas, insurance coverage will get dropped, etc. That’s not worth it IMO.
Protest at Tesla dealerships, or better yet your state capital. I might even join you. But wanton destruction isn’t the way.