Privacy browsers
Everything on fuckyc.org about privacy browsers in 2026 — Tor Browser, Mullvad Browser, Brave Browser, LibreWolf — plus the network-anonymity vs anti-fingerprinting trade-offs.
Privacy browsers split on two axes: network anonymity (Tor) and anti-fingerprinting at the browser level (Tor Browser, Mullvad Browser). Brave defaults to tracker-blocking but not network anonymity. LibreWolf is Firefox without Mozilla's defaults. This page aggregates every fuckyc.org resource on the category.
Service entries (4)
- Tor Browser none kyc · active
- Mullvad Browser none kyc · active
- Brave Browser none kyc · active
- LibreWolf none kyc · active
Long-form guides (1)
- Operational privacy — combining tools without correlating yourself The actual hard part of privacy is not picking one tool but using several without the pattern correlating back to you. A practical guide to compartmentalization in 2026.
Quick answers (2)
- Is Brave Browser private in 2026? More private than Chrome by default; not equivalent to Tor Browser or Mullvad Browser on fingerprinting. Operator context (Brave Rewards, ad ecosystem) is its own caveat.
- Is Tor still private in 2026? Yes, against the network adversaries it was designed for. Tor's threat model is unchanged; the operational caveats (Javascript, fingerprinting, traffic correlation by a global adversary) are unchanged too.
External authoritative references
Topic hub reviewed .
Cite as: https://fuckyc.org/topics/privacy-browsers/