Most Secure 2020 Browsers

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Ay I stumbled on this channel by accident and I work in cyber security so this is a subject I care a lot about. Generally your videos are good and on-point, although I’d like to share some additional little tidbits to help you improve your channel. (Not trying to be a critic or a dick or anything, but I genuinely see potential here so I’d like to see this channel succeed.) First thing’s first, you’re completely correct putting Brave and Tor at the top, although it might be worth mentioning that Firefox is just as good as Brave and Tor if you use browser extensions like adblock, a password manager like Dashlane or the ones built into many anti viruses, and an add on called “HTTP only” which does what Brave does by making it so you will only access sites that are secure. Using DuckDuckGo on Firefox with a few browser addons like those and privacy badger and a cookie deleter will make your internet experience extremely secure and also private.

Anyway your recommendations are good outside of that little bit of missing info. The main thing I wanted to say is, you’re supposed to be a cyber security channel! The last thing your audience should hear is that you only use one password for all your stuff!

The best way to have tons of complicated passwords without it being a hassle is to simply randomly generate a password (most password managers will generate one for you, but you can also google “random password generator” and there’s websites that will randomly generate a long password 12+ digits long for you. Have your password manager store them on your harddrive so that you don’t have to remember them. I like to also keep my passwords on an encrypted micro-SD card. Because the SD card is a physical storage, no one can hack it or access it remotely. They’d need the physical SD card. So even if you lose your hard drive and by extension, all of the passwords stored on it, it’s no big deal—just open your SD card that no one else has and copy and paste the passwords from that. Use your normal password for the SD card so that you don’t forget it and get locked out.

With your passwords stored on your harddrive in an encrypted password manager, and a backup of them on an encrypted SD card, you can have hundreds of unique long randomly generated passwords with almost no inconvenience for you since your password manager will fill them out automatically for you. (And if it doesn’t for some reason just copy-and-paste it.)

Keep up the hard work!

tidyheidi