I use Brave as a second browser (mainly to separate different activities) and did not have any issues with it apart from dragging tabs between monitors (it creates an additional empty tab sometimes when doing this). Turned off all unnecessary stuff right when I first launched it and that's it. No bloat, no issues, just works. Didn't know about this CEO controversy but seeing as it was a long time ago, don't think it's a valid reason to not use Brave. And both logo and name are cool.
It's a solid option which we don't really have a lot of in open source space
No, there's no true anonymity on the internet, I think. But setting up a profile where history, cache, etc are tied to your email address is for sure more finger printable than without having one.
What are you talking about? Firefox doesn't need an email address for container tabs or separate profiles, and I think you can still host your own sync server if you want that capability.
I haven't checked if Container tabs work on Torn Browser, but that's my go-to for anonymity.
Ah okay, thank you for the clarification. On chrome, you have to sign into google for a profile. I don't use Firefox so figured the behavior was the same.
Yup, on Firefox, profiles are just directories of settings, and you can have as many as you choose. AFAIK, few people use them, since you can get most of that behavior with container tabs. For example, at work, I have one container group for work Gmail, one for personal, and if my wife uses it, she can open another group for her stuff.
I'd use profiles for a shared login on a computer, but I'd just use separate user accounts instead. I use container tabs for multiple logins for the same service on one profile. Switching then just means opening a new tab with that container group.
I'm talking about the browser user profiles, where your user data (bookmarks, passwords, extensions) is stored.
Firefox puts them into profiles so that you can change between those sets, as if you're a different user, without changing user accounts at the OS level.
Ah okay, thank you for the clarification. On chrome, you have to sign into google for a profile. I don't use Firefox so figured the behavior was the same.
I mean, there's simply just Firefox. Which is apparently not the basis for Brave. It does sound like Brave collects data so it still seems shady.
Edit: could have sworn brave was built on Firefox. It's not. It's chromium. Which in my opinion counts against it as I'd rather avoid a monopoly considering how much control Google has over chromium and the inherent biases Google has.
You might have been thinking of Mullvad Browser, which is based on Firefox and came out somewhat recently. Other privacy-focused browsers based on Firefox include Librewolf and Tor browser.