this post was submitted on 16 May 2026
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Do you use any forks instead of default Firefox? If yes, which ones and why?

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[–] thingsiplay@lemmy.ml 5 points 22 hours ago (2 children)

I was also looking for a fork. Major concern of such fork is, if I can trust the developers and package maintainers (in Linux), and if its up to date very close to original Firefox. That eliminates almost all forks. Librewolf was a candidate I would have installed and tried, but its missing a feature: it does not have builtin support for passwords. I know why its excluded and understand that. I know how to use KeePass application to store my passwords. But I personally want it in the browser builtin without any additional applications.

BTW no, my reply is not a request for alternatives. I just wanted to point out a missing feature in Librewolf.

[–] pixeldaemon@sh.itjust.works 2 points 18 hours ago

I tried Librewolf too, and I just disliked the design, and it was also very slow for no reason.

[–] Jack@lemmy.ca 3 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago)

Librewolf was a candidate I would have installed and tried, but its missing a feature: it does not have builtin support for passwords.

I always disable password management by Firefox, but I noped out of LibreWolf because it doesn't allow users to block all cookies and then whitelist domains for cookies.

I suspect what a lot of people want is a custom version of Firefox with the garbage surgically removed before compile; where the opt-in options still exist for:

  • browser-kept passwords,
  • browser-kept payment details,
  • blocking cookies,
  • whitelisting cookie domains,
  • crash reports,
  • remote changes between updates,
  • scanning everything you download for danger,
  • scanning every site you go to for danger,
  • etc. .