I am a newcomer to the space and want to know some stuff about the mentioned mobile browsers. Information on them seems a little sparse to me. I am aware of Brave, however on my current device it is very buggy and I do not like the company’s reputation. I am aware of Firefox and it’s derivatives and the benefit they bring against chrome’s monopoly, however I believe that it’s non existing sandboxing is an issue and would therefore like to exclude them for mobile use.

Bromite seems to have been abandoned as it’s owner appears to be in a war zone (My heart goes out to you Carl!). As for this reason, Cromite was forked from Bromite by the main contributor to Bromite. This in itself raises several question for me:

  1. Is Cromite as good as Bromite was in it’s golden age?
  2. Does Cromite have some catching up to do, before it becomes an alternative to other browsers again?
  3. Can the project be trusted under different ownership?
  4. Is it not listed on PrivacyGuides.org as it is “new”, or as it’s got an issue? I know that Bromite was once recommended.
  5. Would you yourself use or recommend Cromite? If yes/no, why so?

Also, how does Vanadium compare privacy wise? I know it’s the bomb for security, however it’s developer(s) did not specifically target privacy if I understood correctly. If I were to get GrapheneOS, I’d be happy to use it’s stock browser.

What about a vm/cloud based browser? I have found very little about them, but could imagine they’d make it hard to track someone.

  • dngray@lemmy.oneM
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    Download Navi from F-Droid. It does not have as much web functionality as Vanadium

    From the looks of it Navi is just a download manager, not an actual web browser.

    For that reason, I use IceCat on computer.

    But do you actually compile those binaries yourself. A lot of browsers are open source.

    • Lengsel@latte.isnot.coffee
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      Navi has a built-in download manager, it is not a standalone download manager. I use Navi as a light web browser for websites in case I never a browser on phone.

      I do not compile IceCat, it’s available in different repositories.