It works with most websites, it syncs my bookmarks across computers, lets me reuse my existing Google account instead of needing to make a new one, and I really don’t care about my data going to Google because I already give up my data in exchange for free services (which feels like a win-win).

  • AlexanderESmith@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    9 months ago

    Your opinion is exactly what they’re aiming for. Just waiting for people to become complacent enough for them to take over without any resistance at all.

    Chrome isn’t a bad option because it’s not a good browser. Their goal is to make the best browser possible so that everyone switches to it.

    It’s a bad option because if everyone uses a single browser, the developer of that browser owns all decisions about how the internet is allowed to be built. That isn’t a good thing. Not when Microsoft tried to do it, and not while Google is trying to do it.

    If Google takes over development of all browsing options (including the ones that depend on it’s base code, like Edge), web-based tech will stagnate due to lack of competition (and so, a lack of the need to innovate), and privacy will disappear (even more than it already has). And good luck blocking ads in a browser that doesn’t allow the addons to function.

    Google has proven itself to be a company that doesn’t just kill competition, but also it’s own projects if they don’t perform the way they want. They don’t care about proper copyright protection or enforcement, they don’t care about privacy, and they don’t care about you (no corporation does).

  • candyman337@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    9 months ago

    It’s not a bad browser, the reason it’s hated is because Google is using it’s near total market share to push ads and other bad practices onto the entirety of the Internet. The more people aware and fighting back the better. That’s why I personally no longer use chrome even though using Firefox at first was very different and a bit hard to get used to.

    Chrome is a good browser, and Firefox is a good browser they’re just different. They both do all those things you mentioned.

    The biggest deal is that chrome is closed source, and run by a company who is literally legally required to turn a profit anyway it can because it’s publicly traded. They will do whatever they have to to continue to turn a profit. Quality of the Internet or user experience be damned.

    Firefox on the other hand, is made by a company that is not only not publicly traded, but it’s a non-profit. Firefox is also FOSS (free and open source). Mozilla literally wrote the MPL (Mozilla public license) that’s used by several different FOSS apps.

    So, the options for modern browsers are:

    A. Use a chromium based browser or use chrome, supporting a company who is incentivised to make everything as for profit as they possible can

    Or

    B. Use Firefox created and maintained by a nonprofit who is trying to push towards a more free and open Internet.

    THAT is why chrome is hated.