According to Mozilla, Firefox's implementation uses the "Distributed Aggregation Protocol" (DAP). Individual browsers report their behaviour to a data aggregation server, which in turn reports aggregate data to an advertiser's server using differential privacy. But the aggregation server still knows the behavior of individual browsers, so basically it's a semantic trick to claim the advertiser can't infer the behaviour of individual users by defining part of the advertising network to not be the advertiser.
!chuds if you're not using Brave you don't belong in this ping group
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Lmao you can't avoid shit with brave. It's literally just chrome
Also, this is off by default and r-slurs are lying for attention
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Brave uses a modified chromium, it's not "just Chrome" and doesn't include all the Google tracking crap any more than 10000 other chromium-based desktop apps do.
And it was certainly pushed out as default-on to a subset of Firefox users as a test.
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Toggling some flags isn't developing a separate browser. Any changes google makes that run deeper than some run time options are beyond brave's ability to fix
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It is not just toggling flags - feel free to read through https://github.com/brave/brave-core/commits/master/
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