The Dying Web
Matthias Endler critiques Google Chrome's dominance in the browser market, advocating for Firefox due to its privacy and customizability, and warns against the dangers of browser monoculture for web diversity.
Read original articleMatthias Endler reflects on the dominance of Google Chrome in the web browser market, expressing concern over the implications of browser monoculture. He notes that many users, including developers, have settled into using Chrome due to its performance, despite the drawbacks of limited customizability and privacy issues. Endler recounts his own journey from Chrome back to Firefox, highlighting the latter's advantages in terms of open standards and user privacy. He criticizes the trend of websites being optimized solely for Chrome, which leads to usability issues for Firefox users. Endler draws parallels to past browser wars, warning that the current situation mirrors the dominance of Internet Explorer, which stifled innovation and created a host of compatibility issues. He argues that while alternatives like Brave and Edge exist, they still rely on the same underlying engine as Chrome, limiting true competition. Endler urges readers to reconsider their browser choice and gives a call to action to try Firefox, emphasizing the importance of diversity in web browsers for a healthier internet ecosystem.
- Endler critiques the widespread use of Google Chrome and its implications for web diversity.
- He shares his personal experience of switching back to Firefox for better privacy and customizability.
- The article warns against the dangers of browser monoculture, drawing historical parallels to past browser wars.
- Endler encourages users to explore alternatives like Firefox to promote a more competitive web environment.
- He highlights the limitations of other browsers that still rely on the same engine as Chrome.
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This started off as a rant with a friend a few days ago. We both lamented the sorry state of the web, particularly web browsers. There's a monoculture that we both have trouble understanding. As a result, the tone might be a bit rough around the edges.
To anyone who's using Chrome: I understand. It's a decent browser, and switching to a different one is work. However! If everyone is thinking that way, we'll be stuck with whatever Google decides browsers should look like, tracking and half-baked quasi-standards included.
Take that as a friendly encouragement to go out and give FF another chance. We urgently need more diversity in the browser space. Brave and Vivaldi are good, but they are still a flavors of Chrome. I actually believe, that if you give Firefox an honest attempt, you might be surprised at how refreshing it can feel. They really turned it around in the last few years.
Yes, there are problems. Yes, you'll have to find workarounds. But you are developers. You can figure this out! Writing browser extensions isn't that hard, and a lot of things (including the UI) are very customizable in FF.
> Now, the world's largest websites are owned by the same company, which also owns the world's most popular browser and search engine. Coincidentally, they are also the world's largest advertising company. And people are wondering why they can't block ads on YouTube anymore.
For some people, Google is their ISP (Google Fiber), mobile internet provider (Google Fi), DNS provider, email provider (GMail), search engine (Google Search), web browser provider (Google Chrome), and entertainment and news provider (YouTube). Google tracks their online activity with Google Analytics and shows them ads with Google Ads. Google provides their phone (Pixel) and their phone's OS (Android) and backs up their files (Google Drive) and photos (Google Photos). When they go to work, perhaps they use Google Docs and Google Meet.
Some products are more popular than others, some are genuinely better than anything else, but still... for millions of people, Google practically _is_ the Internet.
Firefox for Android is amazing as well, with full uBlock Origin support.
Eg initiatives like Baseline https://web.dev/baseline and interop https://wpt.fyi/interop-2024
> I have to redo the CCL Web Site, since currently all pages that are not "secure" (https) will not be displayed in Chrome and some other browsers. So http is gone and practically replaced by https. The http pages are treated as insecure, and you cannot view them as http://www.ccl.net like before. The whole site needs to be redone (I mean gigabytes of stuff). This will be a painful process and the problems will persist for a while. [...] I hope I will finish this conversion before I die... If not, then, Bye, Bye, CCL.
However, the decline of Firefox likely won't be tied directly to its market share. A bigger looming threat could be the repercussions from the Google antitrust case, given that a large portion of Firefox's operating income comes from Google.
To me there is no meaningful performance difference.
If you are using "performance" as an excuse for using Chrome, I suggest that you stop doing that and take another look at Firefox or Safari.
However: even if Chrome was 2x faster, it would not be worth handing the web to Google.
Someone I know uses adblock at home casually Googling to show me something, clicks on page and it start blinking with ads. "Jesus man how do you use that?? Install this" links him UBO on Edge "oh, thanks"
Some people just don't see it. Same way, I don't "see" my dust bunnies at home. I see them, but I don't "see" them. People just get used to filth.
I’m an avid Firefox user at home. Dev tools on Firefox are just better.
At work, Firefox is forbidden and I can’t install it. For « security » reasons. I swear.
The only browser I have the right to use is Chrome.
For some reason as well, Firefox tabs just look wrong to me, as if the label is separate from the tab itself. I know it sounds minor, but it somehow messes up my workflow.
I recently tried debugging and profiling on Firefox and I was surprised it's gotten way better; it's just that old impressions are hard to shake off.
Did and done and got the tee-shirt :)
I have always avoided chrome* browsers as much as I can, but I still think Firefox is turning itself into a chrome want-a-be
Two points.
One: dev tools. Chrome's are just so much better than anything I tried in any other browser.
Two: uneven speed with which web standards land in different browsers. True, Chrome lagged behind on CSS subgrid; but generally, it's pretty quick to bring in new standards.
That's it for me.
I think trying to solve the problems of the web is an exercise in futility. The standard (or more accurately, set of standards) is too complicated to independently re-implement. Like C++.
There’s never been a better time than today for independent browsers. Chromium does the heavy lifting and you can focus on differentiation with a small team. You can disable or change any Chromium features you don’t like or ship new ones. Notable examples are Brave or Meta Browser. If competing browsers to Chrome are not getting more traction is simply because don’t offer features that are compelling enough for most to offset the switching cost. Market forces at play
- I'm tired of FF sneakily pushing some telemetry / studies / "anonymous ads" whatever even though they already get bilions from Google
- Brave is better at dealing with gdpr popups and ads than FF + ublock
On the other hand, Brave is a joke at managing bookmarks.
I tried Librewolf last year but I had some problems with it (not sure what it was).
what ends up happening in these discussions - people become ideologues. for some people - firefox works for them - that's okay. for some people - chrome ends up having less memory leaks e.g on apple silicon.
fortunately safari, firefox exist. and yeah google makes chrome - but microsoft / brave etc have their own flavors.
so choose your own poison.
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