Brave is about to solve one of the most frustrating problems with browsing the web

Brave wants to stay one step ahead of Google

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The developers behindBrave Browserhave announced that it will begin to block cookie consent notice popups that negatively impact browsing experience for many users.

In an update, theanonymous browser’s Privacy Updates blog called cookie consent an “infamous and near-constant annoyance”, while citing anacademic studythat found many browser popups track users across the internet regardless of their choice.

Users of the latest Nightly branch (and version 1.45 when it releases in October) will only have to click “yes” on a dialog box on start-up to block all cookie consent popups, using a set of rules and filters that will look familiar to those who useweb browserad blocking extensions.

Fighting back against Google’s privacy changes

Fighting back against Google’s privacy changes

Brave citedGoogle’s latest raft of proposed changes to Chrome as reasons why an open web, and content-blocking tools, must be fought for, starting with blocking cookie consent popups.

These changes include itsupcoming switch to the Manifest V3 API, the plan to consolidate websites into single files via a new standard namedWebBundlesand thePrivacy Sandbox initiativeit has in development.

“The Web is built to be open. On the one hand, that’s great: It means privacy-protecting Web tools like Brave can act on behalf of users, and protect them from Web abuses and annoyances. On the other hand, cookie banners highlight how much worse the Web will get if Google (and others) succeed in weakening users’ ability to block such annoyances,” Brave said in itsannouncement.

Brave has long warned that these new initiatives are actually on course to reduce user privacy online, bydecreasing the effectiveness of existing ad blocking extensionsand reducing the choice users have over their web browser.

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In January 2022, the company specificallydismissedGoogle’s Privacy Sandbox as a power play designed to cement the tech giant’s stranglehold on the web, in part because of its use of Google’s own servers and promotion of the “AppStore-ification” of the internet.

“[…] a cynical proposal adopting just enough of the language and colors of the privacy community to keep regulators at bay, while in practice benefitting Google’s monopoly, all to the detriment of the Web at large,” it said.

Check out our list of the best browsers with a built-in VPN right now>DuckDuckGo, Proton, Mozilla throw weight behind bill targeting Big Tech ‘surveillance’>Google Chrome ad blockers live on after API changes postponed

With Brave submitting its concerns about Google’s reforms to theUK Competition and Markets Authority(CMA), it’s clear that an open web committed to privacy still has its proponents and won’t be going down without a fight.

Luke Hughes holds the role of Staff Writer at TechRadar Pro, producing news, features and deals content across topics ranging from computing to cloud services, cybersecurity, data privacy and business software.

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