For a browser that sells privacy and security, Brave dev team caused quite a controversy when they decided to whitelist certain domains including Facebook ad tracking URLs.
Following a Twitter uproar, they were forced to release a statement yet the update was not reversed. In fact, they went on to add a Twitter URL to the whitelist. The whitelist is hard coded and users cannot edit it.
[I just read this which killed it for me.](https://www.guidingtech.com/brave-browser-vs-tor-secure-private-comparison/)
>For a browser that sells privacy and security, Brave dev team caused quite a controversy when they decided to whitelist certain domains including Facebook ad tracking URLs.
>Following a Twitter uproar, they were forced to release a statement yet the update was not reversed. In fact, they went on to add a Twitter URL to the whitelist. The whitelist is hard coded and users cannot edit it.
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