←back to thread

398 points ChrisArchitect | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.238s | source
Show context
isodev ◴[] No.45141438[source]
Oh nice. I hope other countries follow suit. It’s quite a shame Google didn’t get Chrome divested from them in the US, would’ve been a “nature is healing” moment for the web.
replies(4): >>45141476 #>>45141539 #>>45143526 #>>45145186 #
richwater ◴[] No.45141476[source]
Running a browser without an ecosystem behind it is a money pit and would be worth almost 0.
replies(3): >>45141494 #>>45141732 #>>45142090 #
isodev ◴[] No.45141494[source]
Doesn’t matter, as consumers, we’re absolutely ducked from all sides as long as our “window into the web” is fully controlled by a single corp.
replies(2): >>45141528 #>>45142038 #
mupuff1234 ◴[] No.45141528[source]
And if Chrome were to be divested it would have just gotten swallowed up by a different corp, most likely to end up in worse hands imo.

Can you name any other company that if they owned Chrome it would've been better for the users and the web?

replies(4): >>45141635 #>>45141685 #>>45142076 #>>45143283 #
lawlessone ◴[] No.45141685[source]
>Can you name any other company that if they owned Chrome it would've been better for the users and the web?

Mozilla? Red Hat? Valve?

replies(3): >>45141844 #>>45141884 #>>45141896 #
1. NekkoDroid ◴[] No.45141884[source]
> Mozilla?

Already has a browser. With debatable success.

> Red Hat?

Would probably rather end up under the Linux Foundation and not RH. How development would then continue is up for debate.

> Valve?

They already use CEF for their Steam client IIRC, but I don't think they are too much interested in owning an entire browser. Especially considering Valve itself is a relatively small company emplyee wise.