With @Brave you do not need an "extension that isolates your Facebook identity from the rest of your web activity" -- we block all trackers *by default*, including FB's. The real consistency+courage test would be to do the same to Google's trackers.
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Off by default, and if that is enough (open question) then why the opportunism toward Facebook? Google is bigger tracker, also implicated in psyops.
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Most users do not change from defaults at scale. This is partly a truism since users would reject bad defaults, forcing change or loss of market share at the limit -- but for things like tracking protection, the unseen vs. seen, it's hard for users to know what they are missing.
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Replying to @BrendanEich @brave
Most users don't even bother to change their browser.
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Replying to @coldbrewme @brave
That's true until it isn't, or we would all be using IE^H^HNetscape^H^H^H^H^H^H^HMosaic, for increasingly smaller set-size values of "we". :-|
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Replying to @LibertyFarmNH @BrendanEich and
It's not uncommon among those of us who used to spend time on the internet using Mosaic^H^H^H^H Usenet ^H^H^H FTP ^H^H^H^H UUCP.
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Replying to @MorlockP @LibertyFarmNH and
some of us were lucky^w smart enough to have learned a shortcut
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hey, in emacs, C-c C-w kills the previous word WHAT A COINCIDENCE
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