![]() I have nothing (other than observations of similar sorts of mods on a base-software), but I would say that it would be as safe to use as any other custom browser based off Chromium. Like I said, that's just my point of view. That can be time-consuming, and difficult to keep up with if your source is being modified every day. Each time that Chromium releases a new build, the devs for Brave will need to check and make sure that those modifications don't break any of their tools that they have put in to their browser. Just from looking at the site (I don't use Brave) their focus is on privacy and preventing things like tracking. Small incremental updates to Chromium would be mostly for things like fixing bugs, but not gaping security flaws.īrave being behind on their Chromium version will be a result of them modifying the code that sits on top of the stable Chromium build. ![]() ![]() Just from my point of view, you should be fine. This doesn’t ensure perfect privacy however, as there are many ways to track a user without using IP. if the Chromium-project has later (stable) released out, how secure is Brave on earlier versions? And why doesn't it sooner follow these newer Chromium-builds? If you are using a Private Tab with Tor connectivity, Brave will route your traffic across different Tor servers in order to hide your IP address from the site you are visiting. ![]()
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