👀 Signal Messenger of note-taking apps 🤓 aka 100% open source and free (as in freedom) note taking app focused on your experience and your privacy. 🔑🛡️
@jonah@neat.computer @brave@fosstodon.org manifest V2 is spread all over chromium source. There’s definitely a way to maintain it but it’ll quickly become a hassle especially between Chromium version bumps. In any case, if they said they’ll do it that’s still better than nothing.
As for uBlock… I don’t think there’s anything special to Chromium’s version of Manifest V2 that they’ll need to support. So it should “just work”.
@jesseoleary@mastodon.social Zen > Vivaldi. Vivaldi is slow as shit. Zen is still tolerable. Nothing is as fast as Chrome unfortunately.
@sundevil311@noc.social that makes sense, actually. They should have been more clear about this. Thanks for the link!
And I use Zen, a Firefox/Gecko derivative. I don’t particularly like any of the Chromium forks out there including Brave but yeah.
@nokturne213@sopuli.xyz No idea. I don’t use Brave. I used to use it before moving to Firefox and then to Zen. It was okay. The crypto crap didn’t bother me that much as it was easy to turn off and ignore.
Their privacy policy is really good. Much better than Firefox’s:
@sundevil311@noc.social @brave@fosstodon.org I haven’t been able to find anything that bad in their TOS or Privacy Policy:
In fact, Brave’s privacy policy is miles better than Firefox’s, and I don’t even like Brave that much.
Your suggestion to turn all that crap off is pointless. Of course you might be able to switch some toggles but the company’s policy matters just like you wouldn’t trust Google even though they provide even better toggles for “privacy control”.
TLDR: no tracking by default
@liaizon@wake.st not sure what you mean. Your notes are stored encrypted on the device even if you don’t create an account.
@thasl@social.tchncs.de its possible to share read-only notes as Monographs. For editing currently the only possible way is to share the same account.
@hedgehog@ttrpg.network according to your threat model, of course.