• TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    Vivaldi is closed source. It uses Chromium’s base and adds its closed code on top of it and claims it improves security and performance.

    https://vivaldi.com/blog/vivaldi-browser-open-source/

    It’s the Vivaldi brand

    The Vivaldi UI is truly what makes the browser unique. As such, it is our most valuable asset in terms of code.

    We don’t publish it under an open-source license and only release obfuscated versions of it.

    ​​If a new project based on our code implements features that are fundamentally against our ethics (damaging to human rights or to the environment in some way, for instance)

    Even though most of the security-relevant code for Vivaldi browser is in Chromium, there is some security-relevant code in the UI as well.

    TL;DR another privacy grifter

    • Evan@lemmy.ml
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      3 years ago

      I rarely use closed source software. My exceptions are

      • Windows
        • Because I need to run
          • Photoshop
      • DuckDuckGo (actually good FOSS search engine when?)
      • Vivaldi

      Vivaldi just works so wonderful. Once you use it you can’t go back (Check out the in browser mail client). I really wish they were FOSS though.

      • TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml
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        3 years ago

        Vivaldi is closed source, and I am going to avoid closed source stuff that acts as a gateway host for me to access the internet.

        Windows can be used inside a VM, and GPU passthrough is easy to do with KVM.