• @drascus@sh.itjust.works
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    911 months ago

    Yeah I am with this guy. I am basically willing to die on that hill. The average user does not understand how important the open web is. We are kind of screwed but I don’t know what else to do other than use FF and when people ask me tell them to use FF too.

  • CHEF-KOCH
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    2 years ago

    Nonsense video, underlying problem is monopolies and private companies who develop the standards, not what browser you use.

    If the standards are fully open, transparent and not concerning then it would make no difference if you use chrome and firefox because everyone would use same basis.

    Also chromium team is not purchased or owned by Google, most volunteers are normal people, developers or security researchers that code on it in their free time. You can fork, modify the source as you please but that does not change the argumentation about web standards and how build or control them.

    • @Ferk@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Nonsense video, underlying problem is monopolies and private companies who develop the standards, not what browser you use.

      It’s the other way around. Which browser you use is what directly determines whether monopoly and private companies develop the standard you use.

      You could write a standard independently of those companies, but then if everyone chooses to use browser engines from companies that don’t follow it, what’s the point?

      If everyone uses a particular browser then whatever that browser implements becomes the standard. It’s all about what browser you use.

      If the standards are fully open, transparent and not concerning then it would make no difference if you use chrome and firefox because everyone would use same basis.

      If what you want is everyone using the same basis, then what you need is to get everyone to use the same browser engine (which is what is happening already).

      However, focusing on that is likely to not result in it being “fully open” as long as the popular browsers are not interested in openness (in particular with a MIT-licensed basis that is allowed to be privately altered, extended and corrupted in proprietary forks by those popular browsers who don’t have to be “transparent” on what exactly they changed).

      If what you want is for it to be “fully open”, then you’d want people to be more careful and choose a browser with a “fully open” basis, instead of using whatever is more popular. It’s still all about what browser you use.