Multi-Account Containers
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@karlemilnikka great news from the Brave team, hopefully they'll push their solutions back to the open source which will be quite a significant contribution, and the Vivaldi team can use it. Their current ETA is like end of year, which is great.
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@berektes
I am not so hopeful on that.
They never contributed anything back to Chromium. Ever.
They will open source their containers implementation but.... considering how they treated Brave forks in the past... they sued them lol.
My guess... they will have a license on it similar to shields.
Shields is open source but nobody is even considering to fork it and add Shields in their browser.
Not even now with all the MV3 situation.
Why? Because they demand on the Shields license the fork to include a Brave logo in the adblocker..
Imagine if Vivaldi added Shields. They would have to add a Brave ad in Vivaldi lol.
I am sure they will do something similar for their containers implementation.
I find their whole stand so hypocrite considering their browser is more than 90% a fork, code developed by someone else.
I am afraid we would have to use Brave in order to use their containers implementation.
I don't believe Vivaldi would ever consider adding their implementation and also add a Brave ad in Vivaldi. -
@yngve said in Multi-Account Containers:
Also, keep in mind the differences in scale and resources between the teams. Both of those teams are AFAIK multiple times the size of Vivaldi's. At the very least the Edge team can easily afford to put dozens of developers on a project like this. We can't.
For Edge I got it, but for the others... I don't... what's the link in between the number of people working at Vivaldi and this feature?
When I look at only few example of chromium browsers that already have this kind of feature:
- Arc / The Browser Company: around 50-60 employees
- Shift Browser: around 60 employees
- And according to Wikipedia, Vivaldi had about 54 employees in 2021
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@xorel As far as I can see from their website, the Arc browser uses profiles not multi-account containers. Vivaldi has profiles too, as do all chrome based browsers. Actual containers would require a whole new feature which would be a big development task.
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@xorel Arc to my knowledge has profiles and not containers. If you have other info please share.
Also Arc got heavily funded , created a browser and 3 years later they said , we will create another new browser and Arc is in tatters.
I think Vivaldi is doing much better in longterm -
Yeah, Arc doesn't even support Linux, from what I saw. I would have moved to it for this feature alone.
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@yngve Are you saying you're not going to implement "containers"??
Let's put this clear - Users have been asking for this feature since 2018 on this forum. I'm starting to suspect that the Vivaldi team just don't know how to implement this feature...
Then why don't you accept help from other developers that are willing to help?
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@ihazar I am saying that implementing the functionality and maintaining it is going to be too heavy a task for our team, we don't have the resources for it; I have already tried to do what was essentially a "minor" change in how cookie domains were handled, in order to implement what is today known as "Partitioned cookies", by the time we had passed through a few Major Chromium version update cycles, there were essentially nothing left of my patches, I would have had to start all over again. That is going to happen with an independent container implementation, too.
As for other developers, please allow me to reintroduce you to what I wrote back in January.
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@nixtrema This feature is all I need.
In my case my company uses a vpn that controls all traffic.
sO I want a workspace for work where I can't use vpn to access company's private network services and I want to have an workspace that uses a vpn or my surfshark vpn extension to be able to do whatever work or investigation or personal affairs without being monitored by my company.
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@yngve It's unfortunate that this is so difficult (I thought it would be super easy, barely an inconvenience).
Is it an idea to try to crowdfund for this particular feature? I would love to switch to Vivaldi for several reasons, but the constant logging in-and-out is a no-go. I'd happy contribute financially if that can speed things up (within what a normal person can contribute, naturally, so many would have to pitch in).
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@janterjea You and others may wish to read the article "The reality of long-term software maintenance from the maintainer's perspective"
It will answer the question of "Why won't this open source project accept my 10,000 lines of code patch? I've done all the hard work!".
A couple of quotes:
I would estimate that writing the initial code for a feature is about 25% of the total work involved for that feature. The rest is maintenance
browsers [...] In those cases I wouldn't be surprised if the ratio is more like 10%, or even less
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Reminder for everyone to go VOTE on this feature request in the Chromium Project repo. The more traffic they see there, the more probable they might work on it.