5 best browsers to browse privately

By ASWINKUMAR RAGHUNATH - March 18, 2021

 Best browsers that protect your privacy



A secure browser that protects your privacy may be a critical tool for staying safe online and keeping your data secure from third parties. Unless properly configured, most browsers contain vast amount of personal information which will potentially be exploited - or just collected by various third parties:

• Browsing history: all the websites you visit

• login credentials: username and passwords 

• Cookies and trackers: these are placed on your browser by the sites you visit

• Auto-fill information: named, addresses, phone numbers,etc.

And even with a locked-down and hardened browser, there should be exploits that reveal your data and potential identity.


Warning: 

When using "private" or "incognito" mode in your browser, your real IP address and placement are still being revealed to each website,ad and tracker that loads in your browser. the simplest thanks to achieve true privacy while hiding your IP address and site is to also use a VPN service in conjunction with a decent browser.

Secure browser that protect your privacy:


1. Firefox:


Firefox may be a great all around browser for privacy and security. It offers strong privacy protection features, many customization options, excellent security, and regular updates with an energetic development team.

Firefox highlights:

• Open source code that has been independently audited
• Active development with frequent updates
• Excellent privacy features and customisation options
• Many browser extensions supported
• Telemetry and tracking must be manually disabled
• other modifications necessary for more privacy and security

2. Brave browser:


Brave us one amongst the most effective secure browsers with simple, out-of-the-box privacy. it's a chromium based browser that's fast, secure, and privacy-focused by default. it's a bulit- in ad blocker and browser fingerprinting protection. the most developer behind Brave is Brandon Rich, who formerly worked for Mozilla.

To summarise this browser, Brave us supported open-source chromium, but configured fir more privacy. It does well with its default privacy settings and additional features. Here us a quick overview:

• Blocks ads and trackers by default
• protects against browser fingerprinting
• built-in script blocker
• Automatically upgrades to HTTPS(HTTPS Everywhere)

3. Tor browser:


Next up we've got the Tor browser. The Tor browser could be a hardened version of Firefox that's configured to run on the Tor network. By default, the Tor Browser may be a secure Browser that protects you against browser fingerprinting, but it also has some disadvantages.

Because it uses the Tor network, which routes traffic over three different hops, download speeds with the Tor browser are often quite slow. The default version may additionally break some sites thanks to script blocking. Finally, there also are drawbacks with the Tor network itself, including malicious exit nodes, high latency, dependence on federal government financing, and a few consider it to be fundamentally compromised. There also are many websites that block IP addresses originating from the Tor network.

Another option is to use the Tor browser with the Tor network disabled. during this sense, the Tor browser will work like that other browsers we've covered above. Additionally, you'll be able to simply run, a VPN will encrypt your traffic and conceal your IP, but it'll be much faster.

4. Ungoogled chromium browser:


Ungoogled chromium is an open source project provide a chromium browser, without the Google privacy issues:

Ungoogled-chromium is google chromium, sans dependency on Google Web services. It also features some tweaks to boost privacy, control, and transparency (almost all of which require manual activation or enabling).
Ungoogled-chromium retains the default chromium experience as closely as possible. Unlike other chromium forks that have their own visions of an online browser, ungoogled-chromium is actually a visit replacement for chromium.

5. Bromite ( Android only):


Bromite could be a chromium-based browsers for Android only(no desktop support). It comes with some great features by default, including ad blocking and various privacy enhancements. Here are some highlights of this browser from the offical Bromite website:

• The main goal is to produce no clutter browsing experience without privacy-invasivr features and with the addition of fast ad blocking engine.
• Minimal UI changes are applied to help curbing the idea of "browser as an advertisement platform".
• All patches are published under GNU/GPLv3 to enable other open source project's usage.
• Bromite is simply available for Android lollipop(v5.0, API level 21) and above.

Another cool feature i prefer with Bromite is that you just can use custom ad block filters. Bromite is under active development and remains a good browser for Android users.

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