> On Windows, I use to use (lol, sorry for my English) some Firefox plug-ins
like Ghostery or Do not track. I supposed I would find this type of plug-in
on Abrowser, but I didn't.
I prefer to disable cookies on my default browser. Any sites that require
identification to post (like Trisquel) I use a separate browser (or
profile[1]). The cookie-enabled browser is set to private browsing, so after
a short session all of the cookies are cleared.
You could also use a cookie whitelist (uncheck the cookies option, then
individually allow sites in the FF options).
> Google and Facebook are not the exclusive bad guys of the internet, tere
are a lot more. Pretty sad I don't know anything about programming, would be
cool a 100% free alternative to these anti-tracker extensions.
Not sure that blacklists are the most effective approach in the long run; it
is like a cat-and-mouse game. Extensions that block tracking cookies on any
given site are a better approach.
PS. I think the GNU IceCat project is interested in developing extensions
that give users more freedom and privacy. JS code monkeys should contact them
if interested in helping. They already have a few extensions, although I
don't know a lot about them.
1: http://kb.mozillazine.org/Profile_Manager#Profile_Manager_shortcut