Brave is one of the safest browsers on the market today. It blocks privacy-invasive ads & trackers. It blocks third-party data storage. It protects from browser fingerprinting. It upgrades every webpage possible to secure https connections. And it does all this by default.
Yes, Brave is completely free to use. Simply download the Brave browser for desktop, for Android, or for iOS to get started. You can also use Brave Search free from any browser at search.brave.com, or set it as your default search engine.
Chrome and other browsers use Safe Browsing to show users a warning message before they visit a dangerous site or download a harmful app. Our scanning infrastructure also protects the Chrome Web Store from potentially harmful extensions. Learn more
Firefox was created by Mozilla as a faster, more private alternative to browsers like Internet Explorer, and now Chrome. Today, our mission-driven company and volunteer community continue to put your privacy above all else.
utmx_section("Tagline") To provide website visitors the ability to prevent their data from being used by Google Analytics, we have developed the Google Analytics opt-out browser add-on for websites using the supported version of Google Analytics JavaScript (analytics.js, gtag.js). If you want to opt-out, download and install the add-on for your web browser. The Google Analytics opt-out add-on is designed to be compatible with Chrome, Safari, Firefox and Microsoft Edge. In order to function, the opt-out add-on must be able to load and execute properly on your browser. Learn more about about the opt-out and how to properly install the browser add-on here.
This is similar to force quitting the browser. Therefore, you should call browserContext.close() on any BrowserContext's you explicitly created earlier with browser.newContext() before calling browser.close().
For Chromium on Windows the browser needs to be launched with the global proxy for this option to work. If all contexts override the proxy, global proxy will be never used and can be any string, for example launch( proxy: server: ' -context' ).
This is a convenience API that should only be used for the single-page scenarios and short snippets. Production code and testing frameworks should explicitly create browser.newContext() followed by the browserContext.newPage() to control their exact life times.
The technology for extensions in Firefox is, to a large extent, compatible with the extension API supported by Chromium-based browsers (such as Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Opera, Vivaldi). In most cases, extensions written for Chromium-based browsers run in Firefox with just a few changes.
Get comprehensive details about the methods, properties, types, and events for all the JavaScript APIs. There is also detailed information about the compatibility of each API with the major browsers. Most reference pages also include coding examples and links to the extension examples that use the API.
By default, the browser extension automatically is automatically enabled for the domains of GitHub (github.com), GitLab (gitlab.com) and Bitbucket (bitbucket.org). However, if the run on all sites option is disabled, any other domains must be configured manually.
This website - WhatIsMyBrowser.com - tells you what browser and version you have, the type of device you are using, which operating system you're using, and your settings for important things such as JavaScript and Cookies.
This website saves you all the complicated steps to figuring out what versions of software you have, what features you have enabled & whether your web browser is up to date and let you focus on solving your problem.
This next bit of detection is your user agent string - it is a technical bit of information that your web browser sends every time you load any website; we have decoded it to figure out what browser, operating system and device you are using.
Are you a developer or sysadmin who needs help parsing this User Agent? We have an API and it's the best user agent parsing API on the net. And if you need the latest version numbers for web browsers via API, we've got you covered as well!
Beginning with Firefox 68, the Browser Console allows you to show or hide messages from the content process (i.e. the messages from scripts in all the opened pages) by setting or clearing the checkbox labeled Show Content Messages. The following image shows the browser console focused on the same page as above after clicking on the Show Content Messages checkbox.
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