Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 3rd Sep 2008 22:49 UTC
While Google's new Chrome web browser has been met with a lot of praise and positive responses (well, mostly, at least), there has been one nagging issue that arose quite quickly after people got their hands on Chrome: the End User License Agreement accompanying the browser. It more or less granted Google the rights to everything seen or transmitted through the browser. Google now changed the EULA, saying it was a big case of woopsiedoopsie.
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Except for the fact that Opera does TOO MUCH. That's what's been putting people off. "Opera 12 released, washes your laundry!"
Seriously, Opera doesn't gain a lot of market share because it tries to be too much. I want a browser, not an emailtorrentbrowser with a doomsday device built-in. Sure, you an turn it all off, but why go through all that hassle when I can simply download Firefox (or Chrome) and get what I wanted all the time: a webbrowser.
Member since:
2005-06-29
Except for the fact that Opera does TOO MUCH. That's what's been putting people off. "Opera 12 released, washes your laundry!"
Seriously, Opera doesn't gain a lot of market share because it tries to be too much. I want a browser, not an emailtorrentbrowser with a doomsday device built-in. Sure, you an turn it all off, but why go through all that hassle when I can simply download Firefox (or Chrome) and get what I wanted all the time: a webbrowser.