Hello all

I'm not 'voting' as I do not fully understand what is going on to cause all
the debate and argument.

I started using Icecat as I felt I had a noticeable performance improvement
over the over offerings.
Since then it has not updated much and appears to be well behind the
Firefox base at least.

Just in general to the recent discussions on "what happens to Icecat next
(if anything)"
I like to choose what add-ons I want (or want to 'turn on'). Having them
automatically built in does not seem 'correct'.

Indeed, I believe it should be possible to have a performant browser that
that is cleaned of all the crud (alleged spying, tracking, questionable
code, etc) other versions may introduce and be announced as such and
perhaps released with suggestions of approved/recommended addons to improve
security/privacy. Users may wish to employ there own solutions knowing they
have a great base browser that is doing just what it should and nothing
more.

I have read that some people feel that users might not be competent enough
to know what to 'add-on' for protection and therefore feel it ought to be
built in as such. I do not subscribe to this and believe most people going
down the linux route at least (setting it up, installing, configuring etc)
will have a reasonable idea of security...especially if recommendations of
what people can do comes with it.

Just my two-penneth.

Thank you for Icecat.


Regards
Habs



On 15 November 2016 at 10:26, ng0 <[email protected]> wrote:

> ng0 <[email protected]> writes:
>
> > "Daniel Quintiliani" <[email protected]> writes:
> >
> >> Should we use the Tor code as a basis for Icecat?
> >>
> >> 1. Yes
> >> 2. No
> >>
> >> I vote #1
> >
> > Assuming that you mean torbrowser code, where most of it is being
> > upstreamed anyway, I vote #1
>
> I change my vote to something between #1 and #2, I can't be
> accurate at the moment.
> In general it would not matter which browser derivation icecat
> will be based on as long as more eyes are looking at its
> code. Talk is cheap action is better, but I have no time to share
> for icecat.
> No matter which code base you choose, it would be a great
> enhancement if the fingerprinting(? html5 canvas? something like
> that) addon / code would be added to icecat.
>
> --
> http://gnuzilla.gnu.org
>
--
http://gnuzilla.gnu.org

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