Human edits
Signed-off-by: armistace <ar17787@gmail.com>
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@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ The web is no longer a quiet place where you could pop a page, read a story, and
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For many developers and power users this is uncomfortable. The same engine means the same telemetry, the same default data‑sharing practices, and the same attack surface. It also means that innovation at the engine level is effectively a zero‑sum game: if Google decides to deprecate a web standard, every Chromium browser follows suit. The result is a web that feels increasingly curated by a single entity.
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For many developers and power users this is uncomfortable. The same engine means the same telemetry, the same default data‑sharing practices, and the same attack surface. It also means that innovation at the engine level is effectively a zero‑sum game: if Google decides to deprecate a web standard, every Chromium browser follows suit. The result is a web that feels increasingly curated by a single entity.
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I have spent the last decade fighting this trend. At work I’m forced to use Firefox because our corporate policy (thanks, Amazon) mandates a non‑Chromium option for security compliance. At home I keep Firefox as my default on the desktop and on my phone, mainly out of principle rather than passion. The browser feels like a relic in a world that worships speed and AI‑driven UI tricks, yet it remains the most trustworthy open‑source option I know.
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I have spent the last decade fighting this trend. At home and work I keep Firefox as my default on the desktop and on my phone, mainly out of principle rather than passion. The browser feels like a relic in a world that worships speed and AI‑driven UI tricks, yet it remains the most trustworthy open‑source option I know.
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Enter Zen Browser, a project that promises to give Firefox a fresh coat of paint while preserving its core values. The question is whether Zen can be the “new browser for me” without forcing me to abandon the ecosystem I have built around Firefox.
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Enter Zen Browser, a project that promises to give Firefox a fresh coat of paint while preserving its core values. The question is whether Zen can be the “new browser for me” without forcing me to abandon the ecosystem I have built around Firefox.
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@ -125,7 +125,7 @@ Chrome and its Chromium siblings ship with Google services baked into the browse
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### 5.3 DRM and media playback
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### 5.3 DRM and media playback
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Because Zen chooses not to include proprietary DRM modules, it cannot play Widevine‑protected streams (Netflix, Disney+, etc.) out of the box. Users who need this functionality must fall back to a Chromium‑based browser for those sites. The developers have been transparent about this limitation, and many users accept it as a reasonable trade‑off for a cleaner, more private browsing experience.
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Because Zen chooses not to include proprietary DRM modules, it cannot play Widevine‑protected streams (Netflix, Disney+, etc.) out of the box. Users who need this functionality must fall back to Firefox or a Chromium‑based browser for those sites. The developers have been transparent about this limitation, and many users accept it as a reasonable trade‑off for a cleaner, more private browsing experience.
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### 5.4 Security updates
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### 5.4 Security updates
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