• @danielton@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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          3910 months ago

          I knew about that. They also pay to be the default search engine on Firefox.

          But my joke was that these changes make it seem like they don’t want people to use Chrome anymore and switch to Firefox instead. If users knew about this stuff and understood it, Firefox would bounce back.

          • Ænima
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            10 months ago

            I have already begun to move from Google services.

            Look for other large corporations to continue this trend: offer a product to the masses for free, wait until you have little to no competitors and dominate in market share, then put it behind a pay wall or strongarm changes that most of the population doesn’t understand. Oracle did it with Java, knowing most companies were too invested to look for alternatives, and now Google is doing it with their Chrome baked-in privacy changes and ad crackdown.

            I expect to see more of this trend from “free” services as the people continue to wake up and take their personal data seriously. We know the government(s) won’t do a thing to change the status quo, and I have no idea what else to do other than cry into my ramen and binge watch the death of a planet in 4K!

            Unfortunately, the rich keep scarcity high to ensure they not only make the most money, but they can use less money to buy favors from those with less. Man greed sucks…

            • @Tetley@lemm.ee
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              610 months ago

              It’s even more insidious when you look at the shit Amazon does, im almost certain they hyper-aggressively track the popularity of products not made by them, ones that are made by small companies (and even individuals in some cases) for the sole purpose of seeing what’s popular with the masses and then they make their own shitty version of said product followed by undercutting the original products cost significantly. And when people go to search they of course put their shit product at the top of the search page so that’s the one the unaware will always buy. It’s kind of a genius business model if we are being honest, if you’re an absolute shit stain that completely lacks morals that is. I just can’t believe they’ve been allowed to do this for so long under the radar because I feel like I never hear people talk about that particular scummy tactic they use.

          • @HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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            310 months ago

            If users knew about this stuff and understood it, Firefox would bounce back.

            I wish that were true. But how long have companies like Google and Meta been tracking people? Ask anyone on the street if they think Google and Meta know everything about them and they’ll say “yes but I don’t care” or “yes but it’s unavoidable”. There’s just no way people don’t know by now what incredibly invasive corporations they are. They just don’t care.

          • @kautau@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            While I agree at some level, most users aren’t like you or me. They are my mom, my boss, my mailman. They only care about convenience, and understanding even the difference between browsers is one thing, let alone why they should use a different one. Unfortunately I don’t think that’s likely to change. If it was, Facebook wouldn’t exist, if those people cared about their online privacy they wouldn’t use the platform, but here we are

            • @danielton@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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              210 months ago

              Yeah, people knew enough to ditch IE for Firefox, but I think Google’s marketing convinced everybody that Chrome was the best. Most people tell me they use Chrome because it’s the fastest.

              • @kautau@lemmy.world
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                10 months ago

                Yeah early on when chrome was released I was a big proponent of it. But that was in Google’s earlier days before they adopted Microsoft’s EEE policy

                • @danielton@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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                  410 months ago

                  Really? I always hated it. It was such a resource hog compared to Firefox, and that only got worse as Firefox improved.

                  My main Linux distro at the time, Fedora, wouldn’t even ship Chromium because of how difficult and inefficient it was to package. It leaves a bunch of Google crap on Mac too.

                  Was it better on Windows or something? Because it’s always been crap on Linux and Mac.

                  • @kautau@lemmy.world
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                    10 months ago

                    In 2008? Sure, chrome was lightning quick, especially with V8 on the JS side, granted this was on Mac. It was only a matter of time before it became google’s ad platform though

      • @Resonosity@lemmy.ca
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        610 months ago

        I made the switch a few weeks ago. While the transition was a little inconvenient, I got everything set up in maybe an hour or two. Performance was wacky for a few hours after that, but it’s settled now for my purposes.

        You definitely have to finagle the browser with add-ons and other about:config things to make it work for you, but after that yeah I can say I prefer Firefox over Chrome!

        Now I just need to deGoogle everything else…

        • @danielton@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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          310 months ago

          I actually never stopped using Firefox. I tried Chrome/Chromium on and off since it came out in 2008, but I never understood the appeal. Chrome looks more minimal, but it always ran like crap on Linux and Mac for me. Was it better on Windows or something? The constant memes about Chrome’s RAM and CPU usage would lead me to believe it isn’t.

        • @spitfire
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          19 months ago

          Check out Vivaldi

    • facts
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      -1510 months ago

      Riiiight, because Google wasn’t doing sneaky tracking shit leading up to this. This time, they’ll surely switch, all dozens of them, and a couple might even use Firefox. woohoo

      Reality: https://gs.statcounter.com/browser-market-share

      Someone reply to me saying they just switched to make this a perfect internet circlejerk.

      • @LifeInOregon@lemmy.world
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        1810 months ago

        Sometimes there is a proverbial straw to break a camel’s back.

        I mean, for some percentage of users this will be it. Will it be a significant share of Chrome users? Probably not, but it just means those of us who got people to switch to Firefox in the 00’s and Chrome in the early 10’s need to be as vigorous with getting people off Chrome now.

        • @Vub@lemmy.world
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          1910 months ago

          Orion is not open source so that’s a no. There is no way to know that what they tell us is true. If they free their code it might become my go to browser as well.

          • @Aux@lemmy.world
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            210 months ago

            There is a way to tell - just check the binary. Actually, you need to check binaries of open source apps as well.

            • @Vub@lemmy.world
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              310 months ago

              Check the binary for current outgoing traffic? Sure but instant traffic is not the only way to be tracked, and it is particularly difficult to get an overview for a browser.

              A open source project is automatically safer to use. Sure, any binary can be injected with crap but in a closed source app there is really no way to know anything for sure.

                • @Vub@lemmy.world
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                  110 months ago

                  Sure the binary is what I run, but I am not following what your point is. If you are paranoid about binaries from an open source project, just compile it yourself. It’s easy. That’s just not an argument against open source.

                  • @Aux@lemmy.world
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                    110 months ago

                    I’m not arguing against open source. What I’m saying is that binary is NOT an issue. You can analyze it exactly the same way you can do with source code.

      • @Swim@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        downvoted for stating facts. I can only give you one updoot brother, you’re the hero we need.