I've been using the Beta version of Brave for almost two weeks now, having switched from the "Stable Release" almost immediately after installing it. It's an excellent browser - almost identical to Chrome / Chromium, but with several troublesome niggles fixed.
I haven't put any of my own money in, but because I allow the browser to post a couple of ads an hour using the Windows "System Notification" mechanism, I've apparently accumulated 5.5 BAT - that's equivalent to $1.68 in "revenue earned from ads".
The Brave browser tells me I spend over 80% of my time on Stack Exchange sites (it's accrued on an anonymous "per machine" basis, and this just happens to be a PC I use mostly to access SE sites), so in principle Stack Exchange is line for upwards of $50 a year just on my account (at no cost to me! :)
There must be thousands, if not tens of thousands of relatively committed (high-rep?) users across the SE network. If a sizable proportion of us adopted the Brave approach, that would surely be a useful additional revenue stream for those long-suffering guys who've nobly bankrolled the site for so many years.
I despise adverts with a vengeance, but from what I can make out, Brave represents a credible alternative way of funding "useful, highly-valued" contributors to worthwhile Internet content.
In short, I'd like to hope that Brave will continue to gain traction, and that sites like SE will endorse it both as a worthwhile revenue stream (for themselves), and as a credible alternative (for their user base) to the way corporate advertising budgets currently control much of the Internet's funding of content.
printf("Just giving my %1.f cents to SO meta", round(0.15*13.3));
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