I thought it would be helpful for all the good people of Lemmy World if we shared our browser setups.
I’m mostly a laptop user when it comes to the Internet. I’ve been using Firefox with the Ublock Origin addon and it makes browsing the web so much less ad filled.
For youtube specifically I’ve had the best results with Chrome and an extension called Clear Skies for ad skipping.
Share you own browser setup. What do you use to surf the wild waves of the web to avoid the sharks and the sharp rocks?
You can use profiles if you want different use cases. I dont think “increased attack surface” is the biggest problem, but you have 2 browsers that are both updated, take up RAM etc.
You could just use different Firefox profiles, using a custom desktop entry with actions and one action for every profile, example:
desktop entry
[Desktop Entry] Name=Firefox Comment=Web Browser GenericName=Web Browser Exec=firefox %u Type=Application Icon=firefox Categories=Network;WebBrowser; MimeType=text/html;text/xml;application/xhtml+xml;application/vnd.mozilla.xul+xml;application/rss+xml;application/rdf+xml;image/gif;image/jpeg;image/png;x-scheme-handler/http;x-scheme-handler/https; Actions=Private;Work;PrivateWindow;Insecure [Desktop Action Private] Name=Open Private Profile Exec=firefox -p private %u [Desktop Action Work] Name=Open Work Profile Exec=firefox -p work %u [Desktop Action PrivateWindow] Name=Open Private Window Exec=firefox -p private --private-window %u [Desktop Action Insecure] Name=Open Insecure Profile Exec=mullvad-exclude firefox -p insecure %u
This was so cool to find out, and in KDE (and likely other desktops) you can access those actions using right click.
You can also change such a workflow to do
launch app && rm -rf ~/appdirectory
which will enforce to always delete everything without needing to trust that app. I do that for the flatpak app “Decoder” which is great but wants to save a history without an opt-out, and as I use it for password sharing (generate a QR code locally on my phone)That’s pretty neat… I’ll look in to it. Than you for the info.