![]() ![]() You could use the most privacy paranoid browser on the market, but if you run it on an OS that's gathering data or connect with an ISP that gathers your data, it doesn't really matter does it? I suppose you're limiting which companies get your data, but if we're donning a tinfoil hat, then I'd just assume all the companies are exchanging data with each other like currency, so they probably all have something on you.Īnd how do you know that Chrome is spying on you and Firefox isn't? Have you personally reviewed every line of code in both browsers to confirm it? Probably not. ![]() So my browsing experience is the same across all of my machines.įirefox and Pale Moon do have a sync thing, so I may have to give that a try at some point. One of the things I really like about Chrome is that it syncs with my Google account. Unfortunately, it's not enough to get me to switch away from Chrome at this point. Pale Moon was everything they took away, so I really like it. So why use a cheap imitation when you can use the real thing?Īt some point I gave up on Firefox and replaced it with Pale Moon. I still had a fondness for Firefox and every update I kept hoping they'd make it faster / better and maybe I'd wind up switching back, but instead they just wound up poorly imitating Chrome. It was so much faster to load and it just kind of got out of my way. Then chrome came out and I decided to give it a try. I had everything set up just the way I liked it. All the customization and personalization you could do. But to me there was no perceptible difference. ![]() I didn't run any tests or benchmarks to get a concrete comparison. It really just seemed like exactly the same as the previous version. ![]() I didn't notice any speed improvement when I tried it. ![]()
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