

So, in terms of support Microsoft Edge is the winner. The community forum is Brave’s greatest support platform, but if you have a quick question, you may not receive a prompt response. You can also read more about the Brave Search’s approach to indexing the web and its anniversary milestone in its blog post. Edge offers more support options and has a team of product experts to respond to customer issues more promptly than Brave.

Brave Search also provides a sense of higher quality, more curated results-you don’t need to learn the little search term tricks that force Google to filter out SEO garbage or to actually pull in Reddit posts.īut you can see it for yourself-just pop on over to, run a search, then click on “Goggles (Beta)” at the top of the results to apply a filter. Just as you might solicit multiple opinions on a topic, the ability to manually seek different takes on search results via Goggles can help you gain a wider range of perspectives. A Fake Privacy Browser Sharing Your 'Untracked' Data With Facebook & Others repost from privacytools sub. Brave is known for being a private web browser that doesn’t make money by collecting your data, unlike most web browsers. It offers a broader, more independent look at what exists on the web-after all, what a search engine serves you is based on its opinion of relevancy, as dictated by its algorithms. This feature could bolster Brave Search’s appeal among people who’d normally never go beyond Google. Leith says that in their 'out of the box' states, Brave is by far the most private browser, sending back the fewest amount of information. Brave’s initial set of Goggles, which will be deleted once users begin creating and contributing their own.
