firefox on everything I use. no need for anything else. always been a fan of mozilla
Privacy Guides
In the digital age, protecting your personal information might seem like an impossible task. We’re here to help.
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Additional Resources:
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- Consumer Reports Security Planner
- Jonah Aragon (YouTube)
- r/Privacy
- Big Ass Data Broker Opt-Out List
ditto, FF Nightly everywhere..fuck chrome/chromium
This, except Librewolf on desktop and Mull on android to get some extra hardening.
Firefox on android and desktop. Never had any reason to use anything else.
Librewolf on desktop, Mull (and Fennec) on android. If some important site is broken, I have some chromium based backups without any modifications, which I wipe every now and then.
For Librewolf there are a few interesting privacy addons, most importantly Font Fingerprint Defender. It scrambles the list of installed fonts on the system, so if websites analyze those in order to track you, they will detect you as a new unique user every time you visit their sites.
Firefox everywhere + uBlock, no script
I use Firefox Beta on Android because it lets you use arbitrary extensions unlike the stable version at the moment. It's a bit of a pain to set up, but it means that in addition to uBlock Origin on mobile (the killer app of Firefox Android IMHO), I've also got Redirector set up to redirect all visits to Imgur/Reddit/sigh Twitter (if I have to) to the proxies out there like LibReddit or Rimgo so I don't have to log in or be tracked at much. (There's an extension called LibRedirector that gets recommended that automates the process better, but it's really flakey in my experience.)
Otherwise just got all the usual security settings turned up.
Firefox on desktop and Android. Plus a bunch of add-ons of course. Never switched away from it, especially not for Chrome.
on android, i have three.
- the default browser is an f-droid rarity called 'privacy browser'. it is configured to allow scripting but reject practically everything else (storage, cookies). this will break lots of things, but i feel safer with this as the initial offer. it's wired to a searxng instance for search. i have a personal hosted homepage that it uses for home.
- if i am opening something myself, i use an app shortcut that opens my home page on mull. mull itself doesn't believe in home pages, so i have to use a shortcut. it uses a searxng instance for search. it's configured to discard all data on quit. if something breaks on privacy browser, i share it into mull.
- for sites in which i need a persistent login, i use duckduckgo browser, again with an app shortcut since it doesn't believe in home pages. i don't open links in ddg, instead sharing them to one of the other two. i don't search here since you can only use ddg.
on desktop (all platforms), i use brave with a lot of stuff turned off, homed normally and pointed to the same search instance. i have cookie autodelete to burn cookies as i browse. i spend a lot of time manually deleting local storage.
i don't love this flow. what i really would like is one browser that would:
- load my home page when i click its icon
- burn all cookies and local storage on exit, except from domains i designate
i haven't found an answer for that yet, would love ideas.
i have previously used and discarded, for various reasons: vivaldi, firefox, firefox focus, chromium, librewolf. i carry some of these for occasional use, either for 'let it through' or 'fuzz all the things' threat models.
I use Brave and I actually really like it, but I don't recommend it to other people because the crypto shit is frankly kind of embarrassing. It takes a fundamentally good piece of software and makes it feel scammy. I wish they would figure out a better business model, but it's not like I have any ideas.
I'm comfortable just turning all of it off in the settings, but I don't feel comfortable recommending it to people who are less technical than I am because I can already tell they'll be like "You said this was supposed to be more secure why is it trying to sell me crypto"
EDIT: Still, though, ultimately whenever I have to use anyone's "regular" device without adblocking and everything I'm shocked at how annoying the internet is, so Brave is doing its job haha.
Firefox on both Fedora and Android, with adblockers and privacy enhancements (e.g. adnauseam) for the daily browsing, and Falkon to view documentation since it's lightweight
Mull on GrapheneOS on my phone, and hardened Firefox (arkenfox) on my desktop/laptop.
I find that this is a pretty capable setup that can handle 95% of what I need to do, and for the other 5% of the time I can fall back to ungoogled-chromium to ensure webpage compatibility
Also switched recently from Fennec to Mull on GrapheneOS. Thank for the arkenfox hint!
Firefox with some customisations and uBlock Origin.
I use Firefox on desktop with a custom config and ublock origin. Mull on my phone with ublock origin. I also use startpage for search.
I used to use bromite until yesterday when I discovered that it has been abandoned by the main dev. One of the contributions is keeping the browser patches alive in his own repo but not under the bromite branding.
So currently I'm test driving Mulch which includes vanadium and bromite patches. My backup is trusty Fennec :)
There is a Bromite fork called Cromite if you'd like to go on with that.
https://github.com/uazo/cromite
It has a FDroid repository if you want to keep it updated 😊
Thanks! This is great.
For the record I use Mull and Mullvad Browser (no relation).
Haha you aren't alone in using bromite for months without noticing it's no longer maintained.
+1 for bromite-buildtools https://github.com/uazo/bromite-buildtools
Vanadium and Mull on Android, Librewolf and Mullvad Browser on Desktop.
Firefox on both Fedora and Android, with adblockers and privacy enhancements (e.g. adnauseam) for the daily browsing, and Falkon to view documentation since it's lightweight
What is a FOSS browser? I use Waterfox and Pale Moon, sometimes Firefox and scrupulously avoid Chrome and Edge.
FOSS, Free and Open Source Software.
I'm using Librewolf on desktop (Firefox fork focused on privacy and security) and Brave on mobile. Brave hardened via these settings: https://www.privacyguides.org/en/mobile-browsers/#recommended-configuration
I'm using FireFox on PC and Fennec on mobile. I refuse to use Chromium-based browsers because I refuse to coöperate with Google pushing to monopolise the making of internet standards. And to be honest, I haven't had a single real issue yet from not using it.
I use Brave Search for searching because it has it's on crawler, has pretty good results, and despite it saying it's introducing adds, I haven't seen any yet. I only don't like that for images, it just opens Google or Bing with the querry forwarded, but at least they are clear about that they do that.
Browser and search engine choice is only a tiny part of browsing securely and privatly tho.
On mobile I use bromite-buildtools maintained by Uazo on github. I've read they were involved with bromite when it was still actively maintained and have been continuing to improve it and keep it up to date with chromium upstream. I use Obtainium to keep it updated since it's not on fdroid or Izzy.
https://github.com/uazo/bromite-buildtools
On desktop I keep it simple with FF and ublock
Regarding search engines - Brave Search cured my Google-hopping. Great results, almost zero blogspam. It does support the same bang syntax as DDG, if you want to redirect your search.
Depending on what you're searching for it also has a "Discussions" section near the top of the results page so that you don't even have to append "reddit" or "stack overflow" to your query to find normal people opinions - they only need to add Lemmy to it now ;)
On my android phone, I'm running grapheneos, so I just use vanadium which is their hardened browser..... On my laptop, I've hardened my Firefox.... Tho might be much better options now a days
I tend to switch mobile OSs frequently because of my curiosity for custom ROMs. Overall I mainly use FOSS Browser or iodé Browser (a fork of FF by iodé OS) and Tor on my mobile.
On my work notebook it is FF with AdBlocker (and Snowflake), rarely Edge, and Tor.
On my private notebook, which I use the least, it is FF with NoScript, Privacy Badger, and AdBlocker and Tor.
I use Vivaldi on my phone, and FireFox on desktop.
Same here. But Firefox isn't very privacy respecting out of the box so it needs some extra work to make it a privacy respecting browser.
Kiwi browser on Android which supports chrome plugins
I can't find information at all on Fennec F-Droid because of the blackouts, could someone tell me more about Fennec F-Droid. First of all, wasn't it a dead project? I remember it no longer being maintained. Secondly, that it tracks and reports activity in the anti features section. If this is true then should I use something else. I'm really frustrated that I can't find this info because all I find on searches is reddit links. If anyone can shed some light that would be great! I heard a lot of good things about it and IF it's safe I'd love to use it.
I think the warning is because you CAN connect to a Firefox sync account. There may be something else too, but I trust Mozilla over Vivaldi or Brave any day. No need to add the sync account if you don't want to.
The best feature of Fennec for me is ability to configure DNS over HTTPS via about:config. Allows use of adblocking (Adguard Home) without heavy plugins on the go. I'm still stumped how DoH hasn't been enabled to official Firefox Android, works great on Fennec.
Edit: DoH added -> enabled, the feature is there on Ff, just no way to configure it.
wasn't it a dead project?
the latest version has been released a week ago, so... no?
it tracks and reports activity in the anti features section.
pretty sure it's about Mozilla's telemetry, which is disabled by default in the F-droid version.
Currently using Orion on iOS. It’s made by the same people behind the Kagi search engine (which I also use now).
It’s still in alpha, so I occasionally encounter a bug, but the fact that it has built-in advert and tracking protection, as well as cool tab-suspend features sold me.
It tends to be on a newer version of WebKit then then Safari as well.
Oh, and did I mention it can use both Chrome and Firefox extensions?