On 2020-09-14 20:36:39 William Morder via trinity-users via tde-users wrote:
Re: [users] installing icecat from source packages From: "William Morder via trinity-users via tde-users" users@trinitydesktop.org To: TDE Users users@trinitydesktop.org CC: "William Morder via trinity-users" ml-migration-agent@trinitydesktop.org
On Monday 14 September 2020 18:22:35 E. Liddell wrote:
On Mon, 14 Sep 2020 08:01:40 -0700
William Morder via tde-users ml-migration-agent@trinitydesktop.org
wrote:
On a side note, I wonder if we could get a proper, working, up-to-date version of icecat into the repositories somewhere (as it has disappeared from Trisquel and others).
Why? It's just a rebrand of Firefox with a few trivial patches, as far as I know. If you find Firefox itself unsatisfactory, try one of the other forks/cousins from the Mozilla family (Pale Moon, Waterfox, or Seamonkey).
Not so! True, it does look pretty much the same, and to the untrained eye, they are about equal. After having used a lot of Mozilla browsers, I can tell you for sure that Icecat offers some major differences.
For one thing, if you use Tork to manage the Tor network, you can watch the system requests that go out of your browser. If you have a graphical firewall that shows live connections in real time, you can watch what requests are sent out over direct connections. Lots of these requests go out in Firefox and other browsers, no matter how we might try to stop them. Whenever I would simply click on an open tab for a web page (weather, TV channels, ycombinator, whatever), immediately system calls went out, not only to the web page itself, but to other third-parties, despite the fact that I have systematically disabled everything of that sort, blocked sites, use a modified hosts file, etc.
Only Icecat blocks tracking of this sort. You don't have to believe me, of course; just check it out for yourself. On the other hand, even Icecat could be improved in small ways; but I would say that it comes closest to actual respect for users, and enabling a user to make the browser behave as desired.
Otherwise, you ought to just collect all your personal information, make it neat and orderly, put copies in envelopes, and mail them to Amazon, Google, Facebook, and all the rest; because you are just giving it all away, every time you open a browser, every single page you load, every tab you click, every scroll through the page, every little detail that gives away who you are.
I suppose a browser is not really a candidate for becoming a TDE-Trinity package? but it is a thought, since we already have Konqueror, which is a web browser as well as a file manager.
There's a couple of obvious problems:
Firefox and all its forks are GTK-based. TDE is (T)QT-based.
Adopting another Really Huge codebase is the last thing this project
needs right now. If the manpower to work on a browser were available, it would be better to put it to use replacing Konqueror's layout and scripting engines with something more modern.
Yeah, I sort of expected this answer. I didn't know the technical details, but I knew that people who work on mozilla-type browsers usually work on the same kinds of things; probably for good reason.
Still, it would be nice to see Icecat in the respositories.
E. Liddell
I will count you as in the *not interested* category.
;-) Bill
Well, /I'm/ interested; I've been trying to get the Brave browser (supposedly good at blocking tracking, etc.) to work on my OpenSuSE (RPM-based) system without success; so I'll be giving IceCat a try. Thanks, Bill.
Leslie