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by outsidetheparty
1055 days ago
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The parts that could most safely be described as "scam", to my point of view, are * lying to users about protecting their privacy, while gathering and reselling more information than was possible with existing 3rd party trackers * lying about "giving back to publishers", while actually coopting those publishers' revenue streams Your "Websites are not entitled to showing ads" statement gave me a moment of thought, I have to admit: I don't see anything wrong with ad blockers, but I do think the ethics of ad replacers is pretty problematic. At best it makes Brave a parasitic entity feeding off revenue that would have otherwise gone to the content creators. I'll reluctantly agree that that part on its own doesn't rise to the level of "scam" but I certainly don't think it's admirable. |
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Like, do Brave think google is just evil and that if someone else becomes the advertising behemoth things will be just rosy?