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by junon 1740 days ago
... and replaces them with more ads directly in the user interface (e.g. the new tab screen).
5 comments

It replaces the millions of ads and trackers on the web with exactly one ad, which is as you say on the new tab screen, that you can turn off in the settings.

There is also Brave Rewards, something that pays you for viewing ads but is disabled by default and can be totally hidden through another setting.

This straightforward set-up isn't something I feel deserves the number of negative comments I see on here. The benefits far outweigh the minor inconvenience of changing two settings.

Because it took lots of fights to get the Brave team to 1) allow disabling ads and 2) allow disabling Brave Rewards, neither of which anyone wanted and went against the whole concept of "Brave, the ad-free browser" to begin with.
There was no fighting—Brave's Ads were (and are) off by default. The New Tab Page's Sponsored Images (a later addition) is on by default, but only appears on every 4th new tab, and can be turned off with 2 clicks.

This type of advertising doesn't go against any of Brave's principles. The user is in control. Trackers and their ads are blocked by default as these harvest user data and more.

Brave's alternative, privacy-preserving advertising model is based on user-control and consent. The user decides whether or not they will participate, and to what degree. And, the user's data is never sent off-device; users are rewarded (with 70% of the associated ad revenue) for their attention rather than their data or actions.

> Brave's Ads were (and are) off by default.

I was never referring to ads that Brave blocks.

I'm talking about the new tab ads. Those shouldn't exist. Period.

> This type of advertising doesn't go against any of Brave's principles

No but it goes against the notion of "ad free browsing" that Brave kind of marketed. Perhaps they toed the line with exactly what they consider "ads" but at the end of the day users installed brave wanting ZERO ads.

Replacing someone else's ad for your own is not what I'd call "ad free" nor "ethical", regardless of the use (or lack thereof) of trackers.

> Brave's alternative, privacy-preserving advertising model is based on user-control and consent.

I never consented to ads. Period.

> The user decides whether or not they will participate, and to what degree

And I never decided that I wanted ads in my browser, yet here we are.

> And, the user's data is never sent off-device; users are rewarded (with 70% of the associated ad revenue) for their attention rather than their data or actions.

And what if I don't want a browser that has all of this fancy mining crap in it? Braves stance is "it's okay to add bloat as long as we preserve privacy". Nobody seems to see the problem with this.

It's such a middle finger to users, in my opinion.

Firefox just started doing that on desktop too :(
It took me a moment to get what you're talking about.

I notice such advertisement from time to time, but it's so unobstructive that I almost like them.

Yes, they put advertising where it doesn't bother me and where it doesn't slow down page loading.

That's brilliant.

Thank you for pointing that out!

a) can be disabled b) not in any way like the ads you would encounter on businessinsider or similar.
a) not when I last used it, there was an ongoing issue on GitHub, b) so?
You can turn all that stuff off. I'll never understand people complaining about free stuff that is useful to them, especially when it is minor stuff.
Because it's not about being free. It's about being honest and telling the complete truth.