How to block YouTube Shorts in Brave:
Android/iOS:
1) Go to Settings -> Media
2) Enable "Block YouTube Shorts"
Desktop:
1) Go to Settings -> Shields -> Content Filtering
2) Enable "YouTube Anti-Shorts"
How to block YouTube Shorts in Brave:
Android/iOS:
1) Go to Settings -> Media
2) Enable "Block YouTube Shorts"
Desktop:
1) Go to Settings -> Shields -> Content Filtering
2) Enable "YouTube Anti-Shorts"
Reminder that this Brave feature exists:
By blocking ads and trackers, Brave already reduces how much memory sites use.
This performance work ensures that these built-in protections are as lightweight as possible, too.
These changes are live in Brave Beta on all platforms and will hit the release build by December.
The cosmetic filters in our ad blocker have been moved to flatbuffers, a more compact and efficient type of storage.
This under-the-hood change saves ~12 MB of memory on all platforms (Android, iOS and desktop) by default, and even more when additional lists are enabled!
Another performance boost is coming to Brave! π
Weβve completed the next stage of improving the memory usage of the browserβs native adblock engine.
Hereβs how weβre making your browsing fasterβ¦
Brave & philanthropy share something in common β both are built to make the internet a better place by putting people first.
Luke Mulks talked on the podcast about Braveβs mission to protect users, empower creators, and create privacy-first alternatives that give back.
youtube.com/watch?v=omkD...
β Walk every day
β Jog every day
β
Walk or jog every day while listening to YouTube with the screen locked thanks to Brave
Perplexity's Comet browser naively processed pages with evil instructions
Weβre currently building new AI innovations that could dramatically change how you browse.
One thing wonβt change, though: Brave will remain the safest way to use AI.
If you want to use models not normally offered by Leo and want to protect your privacy, use the Bring Your Own Model (BYOM) feature.
BYOM lets you run a model on your own device and connect it to Leo to ensure that none of your data leaves your device: support.brave.app/hc/en-us/art...
You don't have to create an account to chat with Leo for free.
If you buy Leo Premium, which offers higher rate limits + extra models, your privacy is also protected in the subscription process. Subscribers get unlinkable tokens so payment info canβt be used to identify usage.
This same approach applies to any documents or images you ask Leo to analyze. Theyβre discarded immediately after Leo answers your prompt.
Other companies retain these files on their servers.
All of the AI models offered through Leo are hosted on our own infrastructure to ensure user privacy.
We donβt retain your conversations with Leo or use them for model training. We also donβt collect any personal data such as your IP address.
AI assistants collect personal information, store your conversations on their servers and use your inputs to train their models.
Leo doesn't. Here's how we built privacy into every part of the Brave browser's AI assistant...
Brave browser now automatically blocks Microsoft's invasive Windows Recall feature! Very similar to Signal, preventing Microsoft from screenshotting your sensitive content π₯
Learn more:
brave.com/privacy-upda...
Nothing to see here: Brave browser blocks privacy-busting Microsoft Recall
Brave's user base is likely not the type of users who would trust Recall that much, anyway, but it's still making sure the browser won't be in any snapshots.
"The best way for us to protect our users is to proactively disable this feature".
We're excited to make our browser available on a decentralized and account-free platform that's free of Big Tech restrictions and tracking.
Learn how to install Brave for Android through our F-Droid repository here: github.com/brave/brave-...
Brave for Android is now available as an F-Droid repository! π±π€
This officially-supported repository allows you to install the browser and get automatic updates without using the Google Play app.
Happy you're giving us a shot! Let me know what you think!
Brave makes the Web less annoying in many other ways. The browser blocks ads, cookie pop-ups and other clutter by default to clean up pages and make them load faster.
Get Brave here: brave.com/download
Be aware that blocking elements could break some sites. If you run into issues, select the "Clear all blocked elements" button in the Shields menu.
Otherwise, enjoy this new tool for decluttering the Web!
Block Elements is already in Brave for desktop. Here's how to use it there:
1. Right-click the page you're viewing.
2. Select Block elements.
3. Select the element you want to block.
4. Press the Block Element button.
Learn more about the feature here: brave.com/privacy-upda...
When you see an irritating website element like a promo banner, follow these steps:
1. Tap the Shields (lion) icon on the URL bar.
2. Tap Advanced controls.
3. Tap Block element.
3. Tap what you want to block.
4. Tap the Block Elements button.
Now it's gone! β¨
New feature alert: Make annoying parts of websites disappear with a tap! πͺ
Block Elements is now rolling out on Brave for Android with the latest update (v1.78.94). Here's how to use it...
We're now publishing results of Cookiecrumbler crawls across popular websites on GitHub: github.com/brave-experi...
This will allow the ad blocking community to review these findings so we can further improve cookie notice blocking for everyone.
Cookiecrumbler uses open-source LLM models to automatically detect cookie banners across the Web in multiple languages.
This frees up time for human reviewers to then design blocks for these pop-ups.
The result is better blocking and fewer broken sites: brave.com/privacy-upda...
Brave blocks cookie notices by default. However, this feature relies on filter lists that can break some sites if the lists' rules are either too broad or incompatible with specific sites.
We needed a better solution. This is why we developed Cookiecrumbler.
bravebrowser
Cookie notices are those irritating pop-ups that ask you to accept cookies when you visit a website.
In addition to being annoying, these pop-ups can harm your privacy. Researchers learned that these systems can track users even if they reject cookies: www-sop.inria.fr/members/Nata...
Big news for anyone who hates cookie notices:
We've open sourced Cookiecrumbler, a system that automatically detects these notices across websites and suggests fixes for them. πͺπ«