- 3 Posts
- 17 Comments
Rob200@lemmy.zipOPto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Thoughts on lightweight open source browser engines?English1·10 months agoI had acknowledged that it was based on Chromium, do you know of any notable alternatives?
Rob200@lemmy.zipOPto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Thoughts on lightweight open source browser engines?English2·10 months agoLately I been using qtwebengine on Falkon browser, but with it being a chromium based engine, was hoping for alternatives, like webkit and others.
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Mozilla faces a privacy complaint over Firefox's trackingEnglish1·10 months agoWould you say Webkit would be a better browser engine, since Blink was based on Webkit and not the other way around?
Rob200@lemmy.zipOPto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Thoughts on lightweight open source browser engines?English3·10 months agoAny browsers that currently use them and what are these engines like?
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Mozilla faces a privacy complaint over Firefox's trackingEnglish4·10 months agoIf it keeps out the ai features in the latest updates and the ad networks, then that fork and some of the other Firefox forks might be a good option.
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Mozilla faces a privacy complaint over Firefox's trackingEnglish21·10 months agoI get it but, if it’s maintained by a different party then Google, even then there’s going to be some conflict of interest compared to Google’s Chrome and Brave’s Chrome for instance.
But if you would rather use the ai features in Firefox, then have at it. Falkon doesn’t have any mention of ai in it’s settings or features. Nor does it have an ad network. Sometimes you got to look at more then just “it’s based on Cromium.”
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Mozilla faces a privacy complaint over Firefox's trackingEnglish12·10 months agoWhen I first started using it it was using a different engine. If it’s using Chromium and it scares some of you, then don’t use it. But with Mozilla doing that they are doing now days with ai and ad networks, does it even make a difference now, between using Firefox and Chrome?
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Don’t ever hand your phone to the copsEnglish311·10 months agoIt goes without saying, but I’ll say it.
Don’t use a digital id, nor a digital social security number or anything like it because a cop may run into something incriminating against your on your phone, something as simple as a notification could be enough.
If you just use a physical card/I’d they can only get that specific information and nothing more without looking to look at other sources.
I will say tho, having a digital id as backup might come in handy if you don’t have the physical cards on you, but be responsible about what notifications and images and other data you have accessible on your phone to them.
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Mozilla faces a privacy complaint over Firefox's trackingEnglish25·10 months agoIt uses qtwebengine, but it does have it’s own ui (making it less like Chrome) and some of its ownfeatures.
But which would you rather have an ai littered browser by default (Firefox), or use Blink.
Considering it’s just a rendering engine, and that the browser has adblocking built in,doesn’t automatically scream to me privacy invading. Unlike in Google Chrome you can even auto clear your browser history on close. The browser itself isn’t based on Chromium, when it first launched it had a different rendering engine.
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Mozilla launches privacy friendly AI addon called "Orbit"English4·10 months agoThis sounds like a good concept.
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Mozilla faces a privacy complaint over Firefox's trackingEnglish47·10 months agoFalkon browser isn’t a bad choice, there is no ad tracking, There’s block auto playing video function built in. All around a solid privacy respecting browser, compared to Firefox and Chrome.
I abandoned Firefox for Falkon for the last 2 years and hadn’t regretted it.
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•Musk’s plan to axe X's block button is a real win for stalkers and abusers.English3·10 months agoI thought they were already doing this last year.
Rob200@lemmy.zipto Technology@lemmy.world•An AI-powered copyright tool is taking down AI-generated Mario picturesEnglish161·10 months agoSimple. They won’t have to spend as much money. Of course them saving money won’t translate to lower Nintendo Switch prices, because they’l actually be making more money by keeping prices the same.
and as long that mainstream consumers aren’t boycotting Nintendo on record profits from these changes related to ai, then Nintendo and other companies will keep the prices the same, aside from raising them in the future.
Rob200@lemmy.zipOPto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•How can users avoid bad content on Lemmy (particularly rule breaking or illegal comments/posts?English2·10 months agoOne of the best ways for sure.
Rob200@lemmy.zipOPto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•How can users avoid bad content on Lemmy (particularly rule breaking or illegal comments/posts?English3·10 months agoI don’t think the web ui has the keyword block function, but some lemmy apps seem to. I couldn’t find it on the web ui atleast.
Rob200@lemmy.zipOPto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•How can users avoid bad content on Lemmy (particularly rule breaking or illegal comments/posts?English6·10 months agoI understand your point, but I was primarily focused on blocking illegal/lemmy instance rule breaking comments. Not necessarily offensive comments, although that won’t mean I might not block some offensive commentators in the future. If I see a user using a racist slur for example, they’re highly likely to get blocked.
I was specifically looking for ways to preemptively block specific types of comments, user defined. Possibly by keywords. I don’t think the web ui has the keyword block function, but some lemmy apps do.
You are right. I guess I was interested in web engines with as much or close to as much functionality as web kit or gecko but maybe some that might be lighter on resource usage as i’m using it.
I heard of one browser engine made in a colab with Samsung and Mozilla called Servo made with rust and that it was meant to be lower resourced then todays browsers engines.
I just installed Epiphany browser earlier today running off of Webkit, it doesn’t have as many built in features as Falcon but for Fediverse sites it works with little issue. But sites with more adverts and javascipt things very well might slow to a crawl quickly on that.