I wonder this as well... considering uBO works the best in Firefox.What are the criteria for this ranking?
I wonder this as well... considering uBO works the best in Firefox.What are the criteria for this ranking?
I wonder this as well... considering uBO works the best in Firefox.


Totally. The conclusion is everything works fine in Firefox, it's just that you disabled old cryptographic protocols some websites still use and by doing this broke those websites. And that's the reason why you prefer Chrome. And you prefer uBOL instead of full-fleged uBO. Gotcha!As I have already written to @LinuxFan58 , there are bureaucratic reasons for preferring Chrome to Firefox.
I prefer to access certain institutional websites in my country using Chrome rather than Firefox because it's less complicated.
And this is the main part that you abroad cannot understand.
With your Firefox, you will certainly have access to this website:
Inail.it | Home
View attachment 294971
because you have, almost certainly, left all Insecure Cipher Suites enabled.
I, on the other hand, have disabled them all and, as you can see, I cannot access it.
View attachment 294972
And for better security reasons, I prefer to access that website with Chrome.
Another reason is that I use uBoL to manage the dynamic filtering of my 9TLDs.
Well, while with Chrome I can see from the uBoL counter if a 3p-frames is blocked but I have to agree if I want to use the website, with uBoL installed in Firefox I can't see it because the counter is disabled.
So, in my personal case, the conclusion is that Chrome is better for compatibility with certain websites that I need to use, better for security, better for access, and better for usability.
Have I satisfied your curiosity?![]()
Totally. The conclusion is everything works fine in Firefox, it's just that you disabled old cryptographic protocols some websites still use and by doing this broke those websites. And that's the reason why you prefer Chrome. And you prefer uBOL instead of full-fleged uBO. Gotcha!
Another interesting thing is that my personal advanced anti-tracking protection in Firefox does not allow your Reddit frame to be displayed.
Off:
View attachment 294954
On:
View attachment 294955

View attachment 294956
about:config->urlclassifier.trackingSkipURLs->https://*.reddit.com/*,https://www.redditstatic.com/*
about:config
urlclassifier.trackingAnnotationSkipURLs


It had a major advantage when first released; history could be erased, which IE lacked.
My plan B if uBO fails to work anymore.Brave is my go-to. It was just in the last year that I decided the UX and performance satisfied me.
Compelling reasons:
- timely Chromium updates—within 24 hours for minor/security updates, usually 1–7 days for major upgrades
- ultra-efficient adblocker that now supports uBO syntax
- heavily modified Chromium fork + Brave Shields pass the tests on PrivacyTests.org
- Group Policy allows you to disable unwanted features without a trace
This is clear from your avatarBrave is my go-to. It was just in the last year that I decided the UX and performance satisfied me.
Compelling reasons:
- timely Chromium updates—within 24 hours for minor/security updates, usually 1–7 days for major upgrades
- ultra-efficient adblocker that now supports uBO syntax
- heavily modified Chromium fork + Brave Shields pass the tests on PrivacyTests.org
- Group Policy allows you to disable unwanted features without a trace
Did not use Brave for a while; is it an official extension?Yes I am the lucky one who is offered a special test ride with experimental browser protection
View attachment 295142
No alpha version (0.45)Did not use Brave for a while; is it an official extension?
My plan B if uBO fails to work anymore.
The limited uBOL, not the full uBO.uBo also works (for now) in Chromium/Chrome.