Le socle interministériel de logiciels libres a encore grossi. Désormais, il y a plus de 500 références dans le catalogue des programmes informatiques que l'État conseille à ses administrations. Un travail de longue haleine, commencé au début de la décennie passée. 473 logiciels libres référencés en mai 2024, 529 en
One reason is, that there is no guarantee that the forks are safe to use. Any claims for “privacy-focused”, “secure”, etc should be considered marketing terms until they are somehow sufficiently proven to be true. For example, Zen Browser is one of the many Firefox forks. Its developer has made some major mistakes and otherwise behaved in questionable manner, and have basically shown to be an inexperienced developer.
One reason is, that there is no guarantee that the forks are safe to use. Any claims for “privacy-focused”, “secure”, etc should be considered marketing terms until they are somehow sufficiently proven to be true. For example, Zen Browser is one of the many Firefox forks. Its developer has made some major mistakes and otherwise behaved in questionable manner, and have basically shown to be an inexperienced developer.
https://github.com/zen-browser/desktop/issues/5947
https://github.com/zen-browser/desktop/pull/927
Which one of these would you recommend then? https://blog.acer.com/en/discussion/1838/10-best-non-chromium-browsers-for-windows
I just use Firefox, so I guess that one. I have meant to look into Vivaldi and Mullvad, and perhaps LibreWolf.