@cyph3rPunkM to cyph3rPunkEnglish • 11 months agoWhich browsers are best for privacy?privacytests.orgexternal-linkmessage-square16arrow-up132arrow-down10cross-posted to: privacidade@lemmy.eco.brprivacy@lemmy.mlprivacy@lemmy.mlvivaldi_browser@lemmy.mlprivacy@lemmy.ml
arrow-up132arrow-down1external-linkWhich browsers are best for privacy?privacytests.org@cyph3rPunkM to cyph3rPunkEnglish • 11 months agomessage-square16cross-posted to: privacidade@lemmy.eco.brprivacy@lemmy.mlprivacy@lemmy.mlvivaldi_browser@lemmy.mlprivacy@lemmy.ml
minus-square@followthewhiterabbit@beehaw.orglinkfedilinkEnglish3•11 months agoWait, you legitimately think Chrome is the best browser for privacy?
minus-square@Umbrias@beehaw.orglinkfedilinkEnglish1•11 months agoOK chromium PR team. This is a massive list of objective metrics to reference. And your entire reasoning is “big company = better” Nah.
minus-square@EmperorHenrylinkEnglish1•11 months agoActually. Zero trust and whitelisting applications can help a lot with APT typed malware. Because it doesn’t need prior knowledge of a threat to protect you from it.
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Wait, you legitimately think Chrome is the best browser for privacy?
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OK chromium PR team.
This is a massive list of objective metrics to reference. And your entire reasoning is “big company = better”
Nah.
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Actually. Zero trust and whitelisting applications can help a lot with APT typed malware. Because it doesn’t need prior knowledge of a threat to protect you from it.