"Private/secure" is in the title and has nothing to do with the political/social view of the CEO. Until abuse of power happens/is proven, there's no point in spreading FUD, fear-mongering and manipulation. As if FF and Mozilla didn't have their fair share of controversies as well...
Don't even bother replying, this is going to be my last comment in this thread (and probably in this sub, as I'm tired of discussion on "privacy-oriented" subs becoming paranoid every-fucking-time).
Again, this has nothing to do with technical issue regarding privacy or security. People are just making excuses. Don't use it if you prefer something else, but don't mix non-relevant stuff in a semi-technical discussion.
By the way, that's funny. In a similar way, I hope that you or other virtue-signaling people, don't buy stuff on Amazon (i.e., support them) as the are notoriously mistreating their warehouse workers. Yes, it's unrelated. I'm just point out a blatant hypocrisy.
Again, this has nothing to do with technical issue regarding privacy or security. People are just making excuses. Don't use it if you prefer something else, but don't mix non-relevant stuff or paranoia in a semi-technical discussion.
By the way, that's funny. In a similar way, I hope that you or other virtue-signaling people, don't buy stuff on Amazon (i.e., support them) as the are notoriously mistreating their warehouse workers. Yes, it's unrelated. I'm just point out a blatant hypocrisy.
I understand that, and what you say is entirely possible, in theory. On the other hand, I see that the tests performed there are pretty standard. I mean, there is nothing exotic that only Brave does well there and Librewolf shines as well. Then, c'mon, Brave surely had missteps in the past, but is generally know to be a solid choice with regard to privacy.
That said, there's an open issue with the same concerns. Even if I'd say that nobody would complain about the employer of the author if Firefox came out with better score from those test...
It discloses that on the front page, below the test table. Anyway, the tests are open source and they check pretty common stuff. I can't see the problem there if Firefox comes out having actually worse defaults.
It is how it is, there isn't much more to say. As a matter of fact, Librewolf gets a lot more green ticks, same or more than Brave. Thus, I can hardly see bad faith on what the website does.
(these test are done with browsers at their defaults). Librewolf is on par with Brave, but I vehemently hate its interface and refuse to unfuck it wasting my time on CSS.
I'm on Brave as well since 2021, after almost 20 years of being an avid FF user and supporter. I don't like how FF is evolving and what Mozilla is doing and I don't buy the "Chromium domination" argument. If the sole reason to use FF is that "it is not Chromium", well, the developers aren't doing a great job.
However, let's be real: privacy on a browser matters until you go to whatever website that track you on the server side (Google/Facebook/Youtube/Whatever), or when you write an email from from you Gmail account, or when you buy stuff on Amazon... And so on. Just use the browser that works best for you and don't be paranoid.
Plase, tell me more on how someone like me, that has been using Firefox for almos 20 years and then switched to a Chromium browsers because of all Mozilla's fuckups is doing something wrong. And yes, I'm technically very well versed. I just don't want to spend my time fixing Mozilla's bullshit and I unilaterally decided that they don't deserve me as a user.
Just use whatever you like. If Firefox is good for you, fine. Enjoy it, until it lasts, as Mozilla seems to be hell-bent on destryoing it.
Pdfsam for merging/splitting/etc. For creating PDF from bunch of images you may try Libreoffice Draw, for instance.