Based on https://privacytests.org

Desktop browsers in their current stable versions, sorted from better (left) to worse (right). These are:

Librewolf, Mullvad, Brave, Tor, Safari, Chromium/Ungoogled, Firefox, Edge, Opera, Vivaldi, Chrome.

Note: Each test is counted with a value of one in this chart, however each test may not have an equal importance in regard to privacy. It still gives an image of which browsers value privacy and which do not.

The maximum (worst possible) score is 143.

Edit: Also FUCK BRAVE. But for other reasons than these points. Read the description before you vote or comment ffs…

  • Katlah
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    25 months ago

    I don’t care if enabling this breaks my websites

    I haven’t experienced any website breakage with Librewolf. Mullvad breaks websites because it has noscript by default (even though uBlock Origin has noscript built in).

    • gullible
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      5 months ago

      If you’re already used to running an assortment of privacy-oriented additions on another browser, librewolf breaks in familiar ways… but it still breaks.

        • gullible
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          15 months ago

          Iunno, I fix and move on. Usually fields refusing to cooperate unless they phone home.

            • gullible
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              15 months ago

              Fortunately it’s infrequent, but it’s still annoying to re-enter multiple fields because a connection couldn’t be made to a telemetry service.

    • @nxdefiant@startrek.website
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      25 months ago

      Then that’s my point illustrated. It’s easy to make a browser 100% secure, you just take it off the Internet.

      The middle ground is the hard part. Supporting both is the hard part