Time to re-evaluate my browser strategy. Time to be Brave
Keeping up with security and privacy topics when your work is only tangentially related and life sweeps you away (so you don't have time or energy the rest of the time) is not easy. That's why your best chance for getting an upgrade is finding the time to focus and experiment OR finding the right article at the right time… and I hope this will be that for you.
I've tried to focus this article on how most people use the Internet most of the time. For extreme folks, there are other options including Lone Wolf and Tor, but for everyone else, keep reading:
Hate having to read an entire article for the answer? Here's the bottom line: I use Firefox for websites with logins (except social sites), Brave for regular Internet (and social sites that constantly lead out to the Internet), and a little bit Edge as backup and personal brand segregation. |
The brief background
Why is this necessary? Because companies are doing everything in their power to get into your business. They track where you go, what you click, what you're interested in, or just what they THINK you're interested in based on your browsing and clicking patterns. Besides being creepy and unwanted, it creates problems.
What happens when someone else uses your computer or you look something up for a friend or family member? Now their interests get mixed with yours causing you to see ads and recommendations that aren't remotely relevant. And what happens when you accidentally click a bad link in a chat or email (it happens to the best of us)? Many attacks are based on the idea that you're logged into your email or bank in another tab of the same browser (this is called cross-site scripting). And what if someone buys ad space and puts malicious code in or (or it's just rude and obnoxious)?
To reduce risks, annoyances, and invasion of your privacy while keeping things extremely simple, the pro tip is browser segregtation
Generally speaking, you can break down your Internet use into two or three main categories:
- Actual browsing. Searching, clicking, exploring, etc.
- Account-based web applications. Email, banking, shopping, etc.
- Social and personal brand. LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, and other things connected to your professional image.
Let me explain each in more detail.
Browsing
When you're browsing around the Internet, you want the toughest browser around because you could end up anywhere at any time. Click a bad link, type a url wrong, or just browse around normally where sites attempt to identify you individually, track you, invade your privacy, and put you at risk due to poorly managed scripts and advertisements. As your default browser, this is the one that will load if you accidentally click the wrong thing in a Discord chat or any other app on your computer.
This is also the one you want to use for your private social accounts and any other app that is so closely tied to the general Internet that its nearly indistinguishable from open Internet anyway. Things like Reddit and Pinterest or alternate accounts for Twitter and Facebook that aren't tied to your identity.
Basically, you need your A-game browser – the best of the best – when out in the wilds of the open Internet.
Account-based Web Applications
This is where you keep your login-based accounts like emails, banking, shopping, and so on. If it's not a semi-Internet site like Reddit or Pinterest and it requires a login, keep it in your secondary browser.
Granted, sites like Amazon are very invasive as well, but much of the way they spy on you requires that you're out browsing the internet and not staying on a handful of specific websites. Additionally various types of attacks depend on you browsing around and taking a wrong turn while your tasty bank account or email are open in another tab of the same browser. Using separation this way largely prevents that too.
Don't overcomplicate it! For many people, keeping your logged in accounts and open browsing separate is good enough, but if you want to see why I use a third, read on. |
Identity Accounts and Branding
In my case, I chose to have one more separation where my identity is known and my reputation at stake. To make sure that I don't cross wires and rant about how much I hate the VI editor on my branded-Reddit page, I keep them segregated too.
LinkedIn, Reddit with my professional name, Kickstarter, Twitter (if it survives into 2024 and beyond), my official Facebook (if I ever decide to make one) – basically, I keep these in a third browser because:
- I want to keep a third more standard browser around in the rare cases where sites refuse to load in anything else
- I can visually tell if I'm in the wrong place because of the different browser. That helps me think twice about what I'm going to post since it's tied to me individually.
For identity-based Internet
I'll cover this first and only briefly since only some people will be using the 3rd-level browser. I use Edge because it's one of the three major-supported browsers and will work for any site that doesn't like deviations from the norm. Also, it's not Chrome (the worst for privacy invasion).
For account-based Internet
For this one, I chose Firefox. Firefox is nowhere near the privacy-focused and community-friendly browser it used to be, but most of the ways it sucks now require being on open Internet. It's still going to be supported by major websites and you shouldn't have any trouble using your accounts with it.
For open Internet
I had been sleeping on this one for a while and heard bad things in the past, but read and watched videos and did some research. I determined that, as of this posting, Brave is the best browser for privacy online. It has a built-in adblock function and VPN (the first is free, the VPN you have to pay for, but not a big deal). It's nicely presented, fast, and works everywhere I've tried it so far.
Brave is also building a privacy-based search engine which is something DuckDuckGo has been known for, but even DDG has some issues that Brave does not. If the Brave search isn't working for you, Google and DDG are still there. Brave does use some kind of cryptocurrency gimmick, but that's optional and doesn't get in the way enough that I see it as a dealbreaker.
Summary
For best safety/security/privacy, use at least two browsers and mentally separate your activity online into "log-in account stuff" and "everything else" (and maybe a third for "anything that I use my real name for"). Tags: Brave, Browsers, Chrome, Edge, Firefox