However, and this is important: Google developers claim this will not actually start synchronizing your data to Google - yet. It’ll do this without asking, or even explicitly notifying you. From now on, every time you log into a Google property (for example, Gmail), Chrome will automatically sign the browser into your Google account for you. What changed? A few weeks ago Google shipped an update to Chrome that fundamentally changes the sign-in experience. Matthew Green, Cryptographer and Professor at Johns Hopkins University, writes on his personal blog: The line between browser (Chrome) and your signed in services was clear before, and now it’s not. Like many of you reading this, you’re probably signed into a Google service when browsing the web - Google apps (G Suite), YouTube, Gmail, etc. Sourceī Brave's new BAT tipping banner for creators Brave’s anonymous-but-accountable campaigns ensure that advertisers are connecting with the users they are seeking, removing the excessive costs, privacy, security, and fraud risks currently associated with middlemen in digital advertising. Since Brave Ads are opt-in, brands know with certainty that when their campaigns run with Brave, their ads are viewed by people who welcome advertising. These users will receive 70% of the ad revenue share as a reward for their attention…īrave Ads also provides brands with direct opportunities to highlight offers and engage with users as they browse the web. Starting today, users of Brave’s latest release of the desktop browser for macOS, Windows, and Linux can choose to view privacy-preserving Brave Ads by opting into Brave Rewards. I’m particularly interested in the opt-in nature of this platform as well as their promise of privacy and security. The Register Brave buys a search engine, promises no tracking, no profilingīrave has launched its “built on privacy” advertising platform that will give you 70% of the ad revenue share as a reward for your attention. Not a Brave Browser user? You can still use. If those resonate with you, it’s worth a try. Openness: Brave Search will soon be available to power other search engines.Seamlessness: best-in-class integration between the browser and search without compromising privacy, from personalization to instant results as the user types.Transparency: no secret methods or algorithms to bias results, and soon, community-curated open ranking models to ensure diversity and prevent algorithmic biases and outright censorship. Choice: soon, options for ad-free paid search and ad-supported search.Independence: Brave has its own search index for answering common queries privately without reliance on other providers.User-first: the user comes first, not the advertising and data industries.Privacy: no tracking or profiling of users.Brave Search has some similarities to DDG (which has been my default for a couple years now), but it’s different in that it builds its own index vs relying on Bing and Yandex.
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