TechLife Australia

Brave web browser 1.17.3

Firefox loyalist Jonni Bidwell has a dalliance with an altogether different kind of web browser. Will he be able to look at himself in the mirror afterwards?

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We’re big fans of Firefox here at TLA Towers. In a world dominated by Chrome and Safari, it can more than hold its own while at the same time respect privacy and freedom. Combined with its containers (for isolating groups of websites) and uBlock origin, it makes the web much more palatable.

But Firefox isn’t the only fruit, and the Chromium-based Brave browser has over its five-year lifespan attracted a considerab­le following. Brave is licenced under the permissive Mozilla Public License (MPL).

Brave Software is open source and we’re writing about the company because it has a Linux build, and a fine one at that. Installati­on is a simple matter of adding a repo (options are available for Debian derivative­s, Fedora and openSUSE) or, if you want to embrace the future, fetching it from the Snap Store.

On first run there’s a brief welcome tour, which offers to import settings and bookmarks from other browsers, explains how to disable installing its ad-blocker feature (in case sites don’t behave), gives you a choice of default search engines (use DuckDuckGo!) and asks you to enable Brave Rewards.

Turning on the Brave Rewards option will mean unintrusiv­e ads will periodical­ly appear. However, if you view enough of them you’ll be rewarded in cryptocurr­ency – Basic Attention Tokens (BAT) to be precise.

These can be traded on many crypto exchanges, either for Bitcoin or hard currency, or you can use them to tip your favourite content creator (similar to how Steemit and LBRY work). You can also donate BAT directly to your oft-visited Reddit, Twitter and GitHub contributo­rs. Brave also has its own crypto wallets, so you can manage your BAT, ETH or BTC from the comfort of your browser.

Nobody likes ads, but they’re unfortunat­ely central to today’s revenue models, so we’d rather see ones that directly fund creators and projects rather than horrible advertisin­g networks.

We found casual browsing to be snappy with Brave and struggled to find any site (that’s worth your time) that required the adblocker to be disabled. Even our sister site and ad haven TechRadar didn’t bat (no pun intended) an eyelid.

The ad-blocking engine is written in Rust and hardware accelerati­on is enabled by default. If you browse to brave://gpu you can see what features are enabled.

We were pleased to see that installing Brave on our Poppowered Dell XPS 13 gave us WebGL2 rendering out of the box. To get accelerate­d video decoding to work we had to enable an experiment­al flag, but then it worked just fine.

Brave really is a better browser, even if you don’t care about its rewards program. Well worth your basic attention.

Jonni Bidwell

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