<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>aptea wrote</title><author_name>aptea (npub14z…jmw42)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub14zwvjvf0ztfp8hlwzv2hqtpjhaugwrgecrvlwrggq2vj8kdd36tscjmw42</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>I appreciate you sharing your story and I respect your choice. Thanks!&#xA;&#xA;That said, one thing I could suggest is to use a privacy browser for the majority of your usage, and just switch to Chrome any time you need that AI feature? Same could be said about private email vs. Gmail: you could always have a Gmail for cases where you&#39;re concerned about emails being sent to spam, but use something like Proton for everything else.&#xA;&#xA;I, myself, don&#39;t use any non-privacy browsers but I do still use multiple browsers, I still have a couple Gmails for legacy purposes, and while I use Brave Search for 99% of my searches, I do still use StartPage and DDG for cross references and image search (because Brave&#39;s image searches kinda suck).&#xA;&#xA;My point is that maybe you don&#39;t have to go all the way. Perhaps you can use the privacy tools for most purposes and then just switch when you need features they don&#39;t have, then switch back when you&#39;re done? Its actually also great to do that for organization purposes, at least in my experience. </html></oembed>