brave-core
Vanadium
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brave-core | Vanadium | |
---|---|---|
174 | 88 | |
2,291 | 722 | |
1.1% | 6.2% | |
10.0 | 9.1 | |
7 days ago | 3 days ago | |
HTML | Shell | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
brave-core
- GitHub pull request support for Brave Leo
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Brave's AI assistant now integrates with PDFs and Google Drive
Unrelated but about Brave and interesting to me: I recently found myself having a large upstream project that I need to maintain some custom patches for, and there's a need for deeper customizations and I worry that my rudimentary system of applying .patch files will turn into an unmaintainable nightmare of merge conflicts after every rebase. I was thinking about possible solutions, and it occurred to me that Brave being Chromium-based must have this same challenge but an order of magnitude more difficult, so I looked for their code to see how they solved this issue.
It's pretty interesting! They do basically the same thing for core Chromium, applying a (big) set of patches[1].
Incidentally, I'd be interested to hear any ideas/approaches to this problem. I'm guessing if there was something clearly better, Brave would be doing it, but it seems like there should be a better way even if I can't think of one.
[1] https://github.com/brave/brave-core/tree/master/patches
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Brave browser simplifies its fingerprinting protections
https://github.com/brave/brave-core/pull/13737
(Incidentally, that PR number is not quite elite. :)
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Brave appears to install VPN Services without user consent
I disagree that it's lip service Brave has a ton of engine level privacy patches https://github.com/brave/brave-core/tree/master/patches
To my understanding you can't match it with just js extensions.
Only firefox on the highest security mode comes close I think?
Or ungoogled chromium? (brave has most of their patches IIRC)
Are there other options that have this number of patches?
- With the merge of this pull request, Brave Browser disables WebEnvironmentIntegrity
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Brave cuts ties with Bing to offer its own image and video search results
Chromium is not 100% Google's forever and always, though they do currently lead the way, and with the most used/backed fork.
https://github.com/brave/brave-core/pull/19476
- With merge of this pull request, Brave Browser disables WebEnvironmentIntegrity
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Brave is a fork, not a Chromium reskinn
They have much more changes than just compile flags. Here's the repo where they maintain their patch set: https://github.com/brave/brave-core/tree/master/patches
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Brave Ads are back? Even when they're turned off?
Brave Private Ads toggle controls just Push Notification ads at this time. So, if you are still seeing Push Notification ads, that would be incorrect. However, it's normal to still see New Tab Page image ads, and/or other ad formats. We are introducing a new UI that helps you better toggle on/off specific ad units, and removing the "Brave Private Ads" toggle that can be confusing: https://github.com/brave/brave-core/pull/18938
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brave browser Dark mode in settings not saving on newest LinuxMint
Yes, being fixed. Github at https://github.com/brave/brave-core/pull/18922
Vanadium
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F-Droid, Keyboard Libraries, and Choosing a Browser
While Graphene comes with Vanadium, their own Chromium-based browser, pre-installed I chose to go with Mull as my default browser. There wasn't anything wrong with Vanadium, it's just that I've been using Firefox (and the wonderful uBlock Origin plugin) on my Linux machine for a little while now and have really grown to prefer it to Chromium-based browsers. In my research I had seen a lot of mentions of Mull and Fennec, both based on Firefox but with further hardening and privacy modifications. This detailed browser comparison chart (produced by the developer of Mull) is what ultimately led to me choosing Mull. It's definitely worth a look at the chart even if you aren't in the market for a new browser!
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UnGoogled Chromium
Check out Vanadium, which is part of the GrapheneOS project: https://github.com/GrapheneOS/Vanadium
- Vanadium version 119.0.6045.163.2 released
- Vanadium version 119.0.6045.134.0 released
- Vanadium version 119.0.6045.53.0 released
- Vanadium version 119.0.6045.53.1 released
- Vanadium version 118.0.5993.65.0 released
- Vanadium version 117.0.5938.140.0 released
What are some alternatives?
ungoogled-chromium - Google Chromium, sans integration with Google
brave-browser - Brave browser for Android, iOS, Linux, macOS, Windows.
uBlock - uBlock Origin - An efficient blocker for Chromium and Firefox. Fast and lean.
iceraven-browser - Iceraven Browser
Firefox-UI-Fix - 🦊 I respect proton UI and aim to improve it.
bromite - Bromite is a Chromium fork with ad blocking and privacy enhancements; take back your browser!
uBlock-issues - This is the community-maintained issue tracker for uBlock Origin
mulch
fingerprintjs - Browser fingerprinting library. Accuracy of this version is 40-60%, accuracy of the commercial Fingerprint Identification is 99.5%. V4 of this library is BSL licensed.
hardened_malloc - Hardened allocator designed for modern systems. It has integration into Android's Bionic libc and can be used externally with musl and glibc as a dynamic library for use on other Linux-based platforms. It will gain more portability / integration over time.