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    1. Mozilla's goals for the web line up quite nicely with my own.
    2. The performance is good for what I want.
    3. The extension API is more powerful than Chrome's.
    4. Outside of the Apple ecosystem, it's the last major alternative to the Chrome skins.
    5. It isn't actively trying to cripple adblockers.
  • Is not chromium, has a good UI, supports manifest v2, is open source and have native support for autoscrolling on linux

    • It also supports MV3 without removing the blocking WebRequest hook.

  • There are other reasons, but if I had to point only one word: containers.

  • Switched to Chrome a few years back when Firefox killed XUL and bundled too much bloatware.

    Now I've switched back to Firefox because it's good again and Google is doing too many evil things lately (Web Integrity).

  • The mobile version has addons like ublock-origin and bottom search bar. Plus, Chrome wants you to enjoy the web, which is full of ads. I don't, that's why.

    1. It's faster
    2. It's not chromium-based
    3. It can protect you from trackers and block ads
    4. Chrome may terminates Adblock-functionality extensions in Manifest V3 and Firefox wouldn't, afaik
  • Because it is fucking awesome.

    Plus on mobile, I likes my ublock, dark reader, etc.

  • Ad blocking on desktop and mobile is awesome.

    And it's vital to have multiple browser engines in the wild for interoperability. If we go all Chromium-based, we're going to eventually pay for that like IE6.

    And Google is kind of an untrustworthy POS of a company these days.

  • Just a small counterweight to everything being chromium. I’m still having trouble with them not having passkeys yet but I know the feature is coming.

  • Because it has a built in adblocker on mobile and with the news that Chromium itself is going to be doing shit to stop adblockers, I don't want a chromium based browser period. Only reason I ever switched from Firefox in the first place was that, at the time, it was getting slower and Chrome was the new, fast, hotness in town.

  • I don't want to sign in to my browser, simple as that. I tried Firefox maybe 5 years ago and I simply liked it better.

    Chrome's manifest V3 announcement means I'm sticking with Firefox.

  • Because before Firefox I used Netscape. It's had its ups and downs but it's never been bad to me to the point of considering moving to anything else. So a combo of legacy and that it works.

50 comments