Macworld - USA (2020-04)

(Antfer) #1
April 2020 • Macworld 93


  1. Brave
    Brave is an interesting experiment in browser
    technology. It’s based on Chromium and really
    looks and feels more like Chrome than most
    browsers. If you’re used to Chrome, you’ll feel
    at home with Brave, and you can use almost
    any Chrome extension.
    But Brave is especially focused on privacy and
    security. It has rather extensive built-in ad blocking
    and tracker blocking. This greatly speeds up page
    loading, but it can sometimes break websites and,
    of course, it robs them of revenue. It’s easy to turn
    ‘shields down’ for a site if you need to.
    Brave can show you its own ads as notification
    pop-ups, for which you’ll earn a currency called BAT
    (Basic Attention Tokens). You’ll also earn them at a
    lower rate just for browsing the web. These tokens
    are then used to pay out participating sites and
    to pay you, the user. You can turn them in for real
    money, or to tip websites or content creators.
    It’s a novel idea, but it’s a little annoying to sign
    up for the whole Brave Rewards programme, and
    even more annoying to link the account with the
    third-party Uphold service in order to actually turn
    BAT into money. And it’s useless to any website or
    creator that doesn’t similarly sign up to be a part of
    the revolution.
    Brave has an iOS app loaded with privacy
    features (HTTPS everywhere, script and tracker
    blocking, pop-up blocking...). And there’s a
    nice bookmarks syncing feature that doesn’t
    even require you to make an account and log in.

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