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Yeah. Brave is desperately trying to compete with Chrome and can’t figure out why they aren’t making much headway, despite having better privacy (hint: users just don’t care about privacy, except for the HN crowd).

These complaints filed by Brave, with their own employees posing as professional “victims” intentionally grasping at straws for evidence of privacy violations, smack of desperation. This is not the first claim they have filed, and sadly, it won’t be the last. Their claims thus far have been disingenuous at best, downright dishonest at worst.

GDPR was not meant as a weapon with which one could hobble their far more successful competitors. It’s sad to see that a company that claims to care so much about privacy is undermining GDPR by bringing the worst fears of those that opposed it to life.



(hint: users just don’t care about privacy, except for the HN crowd).

I'm not sure that's true: uBlock Origin has twice as many installations as Brave does. You might say "oh, but that's just blocking ads!" But if you don't block ads, privacy problems are going to spring out of the woodwork like nobody's business. That is, they might not care about privacy by name, but they certainly care about it in effect.


I’d say the vast majority of uBlock users care about user experience. The current ad experience sucks. Most local newspaper sites, for example, are unusable because of ads. But if it still preserved their privacy behind the scenes and didn’t significantly improve their experience, the install base on uBlock and other ad blockers would be near 0.


And I'd say the opposite. My grandfather just wanted ads gone; user experience isn't even on his radar. I've seen the thesis you've presented here before, and while it sounds plausible, I don't think it's as cut and dried as it seems.

People really do hate ads. We're inundated with them, constantly. Low grade psychological assault, at all times. I don't blame people for wanting a respite.


Actually, you’re saying precisely the same thing I was. When I say “user experience,” I am talking about the ads being gone. No ads = better user experience.


Highly doubtful




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