I took a look at the major web browsers, and how they handle user privacy, from blocking tracking scripts, cookies and pixels, blocking ads, to the data they collect, and how they resist fingerprinting.

So, here are the results:

https://youtu.be/k8hUs0W-UWY

#Linux #WebBrowser

The Best Web Browsers for Privacy

YouTube
@thelinuxEXP at the end of the video you completely ignored LibreWolf which is honestly way more private than Vivaldi even according to privacytests.org, you also never talked about the Mullvad Browser which is a good contender that compares a lot to both LibreWolf and the Tor Browser, not to mention also that you didn't bother to discourage any contribution to Google's browser engine monopoly which you kind of low key pointed out in the intro.
@gianmarcogg03 I already talked at length about the Google monopoly in other videos on the same playlist, and we were talking about browser privacy there, not monopolies :) As per LibreWolf, I talked about it in the video, I don’t really see the issue…
@thelinuxEXP I think it's important for people to not contribute to Google's monopoly also to prevent privacy and security issues, for example imagine if a zero-day or gets discovered on Chrome, that means almost all browsers have it, or how about the Manifest v3 issue? On the second point, you ignored LibreWolf for the final recommendations and I think that's a bit of a disservice to both users (it doesn't heavily impact usability like, say, the Tor Browser) and their developers.