

During the session an extension such as ‘Cookie AutoDelete’ can of course keep or not cookies, localStorage and more, but at the end, when exiting the browser, if the user has included ‘Offline Website Data’ (Firefox) in the browser’s options, then the localStorage is wiped on exit, even data related to an allowed cookie. If the user allows cookies for a given site (globally or site-specific) the cookie is kept after restarting the browser, but localStorage is always kept (by browser’s default), no granular setting. The point is that the user can be specific when it comes to the cookie policy, far less with the localStorage, which has none. Articles on their differences are abundant Time zone queries and sports scores were among the most requested features by users, and Brave's team are working on these to be displayed on the results Heart, beta indeed but that shouldn’t count in the very way the search engine is conceived.Ĭookies and localStorage aren’t quite the same thing, but I understand what you mean. The representatives also said that privacy-protected search ads are on the to-do list. The company is focusing on improving the quality of the core search before diving into other options. When users asked if BAT would be added to the service, the engineers replied saying that Brave Search and Brave Ads are not being integrated at the moment. This seems to be tied to the Country setting that you have selected. Some users mentioned that the search engine is not delivering results in the language they chose, and instead displays them in English. Brave is planning on adding more data centers in the future, to address the issue. They clarified that this was due to how they handle the traffic, the search engine's data center is located in the US West Coast, and places further away have higher latencies. The developer team has confirmed that Brave Search has been slow, and that they have received complaints from European users.
