When it was revealed in 2014
that Brendan Eich donated $1,000 to California's Proposition 8 ballot
proposal, which defined marriage as the union of one man and one woman,
he was blackballed, even though Proposition 8 was supported by the
majority of Californians and easily passed in 2008.
(San Francisco, CA)—[LifeSiteNews] The former CEO of Mozilla has released a new Internet browser called Brave. (Photo: Brendan Eich/via LifeSiteNews.com)
Brendan Eich, the creator of JavaScript, continues to lead the
technological revolution with Brave, an innovative concept in Internet
browsers.
After blowing away the competition (read: Microsoft's Internet
Explorer) with the Internet browser Firefox, Eich has come up with
Brave, a nearly ad-free, lightning-fast browser that eliminates
intrusive ads as well as common but unwanted tracking tack-ons.
A tech legend for his JavaScript and Firefox contributions, Eich was
betrayed by his contemporaries and forced out of business as CEO of
Mozilla, the company behind Firefox, because he supported natural
marriage.
When it was revealed in 2014 that Eich donated $1,000 to California's
Proposition 8 ballot proposal, which defined marriage as the union of
one man and one woman, he was blackballed, even though Proposition 8 was
supported by the majority of Californians and easily passed in 2008.
Eich was publicly shamed because he believed in natural marriage and family. He was openly called a racist, Nazi, and inhumane.
But the tenacious techie didn't give up. Without apology,
Eich continued to innovate and ultimately came up with a whole new
concept in web browsers: the ad-free, tracking-free, fast internet
browser Brave.
In
November 2015, Eich raised $2.5 million to create an advanced
super-technical team. By August 2016, the company had raised $4.5
million in seed money to launch the browser.
Brave is called an entirely new way to browse the web without being
intrusively tracked, and without time-consuming download ads.
Internet users have increasingly been using ad blockers like AdBlock
Plus to cut down on the ads that slow Internet browsers down. But even
with ad blocker software, users still see a lot of ads because the
blockers have special arrangements with major advertisers to let their
ads through.
Even the ad industry has acknowledged it has "alienated" users with so many ads...
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Source: www.breakingchristiannews.com/