Sandboxed Android and iOS compat layers for running those apps, but also native browser, phone, launcher, settings, etc. apps are needed.
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Replying to @RichFelker @CopperheadOS
Existing Android browsers are awful, have near-zero configurability or protection against malicious content (ads).
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Replying to @RichFelker
Firefox is comparable to how it is on the desktop. Brave still has ad-blocking and the (near useless) anti-fingerprinting on Android.
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Replying to @RichFelker
Yes, it already has that since mobile Firefox supports the newer extension APIs. Brave has built-in support for EasyList-style filters.
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Replying to @CopperheadOS
Where? Can't find anything for extensions in UI...
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Replying to @RichFelker
Try installing one from their extension site. Haven't used it in a while so don't remember where the user interface is (Tools menu perhaps?)
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Replying to @CopperheadOS @RichFelker
Brave is worth trying though. Firefox on mobile hardware is sluggish and they still don't have a real renderer sandbox after all this time.
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Replying to @CopperheadOS @RichFelker
Brave is Chromium + native ad-blocking, https everywhere, basic anti-fingerprinting (honestly not useful yet), script toggling ui, etc.
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Replying to @CopperheadOS @RichFelker
Have wanted to make Brave into the default browser on CopperheadOS with the same hardening we do for Chromium, but that's a lot more work...
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Brave is largely useless but better than nothing. Firefox looks more promising now that I found hidden UBO support.
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