i live outside of wherever valve ships to so i had to order mine thru a third-party, so i can't do that.
canvasblocker's default settings let images appear but the hash is different upon page reload. so if i were to use rfp, is there any way i can have viewable images and privacy? also how does ublock replace clearurls and noscript?
i would use rfp but it causes images to look like a glitchy mess.
for privacy:
- ublock origin (default settings)
- noscript
- privacy badger (by eff)
- canvasblocker
- localcdn
- clearurls
additionally, i also use bitwarden for password managing, libredirect for automatically redirecting to alternative privacy front-ends, xbrowsersync for syncing bookmarks, and snowflake for tor censorship circumvention.
none. chromium is a google (-endorsed) product, who put their own little tracking tidbits into the chromium project. if you still want to use a chromium-based browser, i have two 'suggestions':
- brave. renowned in the privacy community but has had a few suspicious moments, and honestly i just don't trust their whole big-tech thing they got going on.
- ungoogled-chromium. basically just the chromium browser but without the google shit in it. no extra privacy-advancing features as far as i'm aware though, and extensions don't seem to work.
now if you really want a good browser, go for either of the following firefox-like browsers:
- firefox with arkenfox user.js. firefox as you know and love it, with the arkenfox privacy tinkering. i haven't tested it and its apparently a bit difficult to install and configure, but i've heard its really helpful with privacy.
- librewolf. a privacy-first firefox fork developed by an independent developer and contributors, no big-tech bullshit. my personal daily driver.
anyway, sorry for the rant, but there u go.
oh thank gabe im not the only one who has this problem..
i'm pretty sure reddit's api allows a certain amount of requests from an ip address before the user has to actually pay for it. or something along the lines of that.
i think it only halted development, not shut down. i've heard one of the contributors wants to revive the project though. libreddit still works fine if you self-host it and you're the only one using it, but not on public instances. self-hosting is easy tho, just download the latest release binary and run it in a terminal or something.
i'd probably say naomi brockwell's nbtv. idk why but she explains things so easily and makes some okay recommendations. i wouldn't say she gives the best recommendations but her channel is the one i always come back to.
i don't live in valve's official shipping countries/regions (ordered third-party) so i cant.