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10 Hacks Every Brave Browser User Should Know

I dare you to switch to vertical tabs.
Pranay Parab
Add as a preferred source on Google brave browser logo
Credit: René Ramos/Lifehacker Composite/Adobe Stock

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If you like the idea of using Chrome extensions with a browser that's not made by Google, Brave Browser is a great choice. This Chromium-based browser is designed with user privacy in mind, and comes with a number of quality-of-life perks as well. The thing is, not all of these features and options are enabled out of the box, or are even all that obvious. If you use Brave, you'll want to know about these 10 hacks:

Use these options to get rid of Brave’s own ads

Brave Browser's business model includes pushing its own services, including a VPN service and a search engine. The browser's default settings push ads for these services on the home page, and you can easily get rid of most of them while, at the same time, customizing the overall look and function of the browser.

Open a new tab in Brave and click the gear icon in the top-right corner of the page. This will reveal customization options. You can start by disabling Show new tab page ads, which removes ads from the Brave Rewards program, where you earn small amounts of cryptocurrency for watching ads. (On the same page, you can upload your own image to use as a wallpaper, if you like.) Go to the Cards option in the left pane and disable Brave stats, Brave VPN, Brave Rewards, Brave Talk, and Brave News. This should clean up the new tab page, but to complete a minimalist look, go to the Top sites option, and turn off Show top sites too.

Now, click Search in the left pane of this settings window, and select the search engine of your choice. Uncheck Brave to replace the default search engine on the new tab page. Note that this doesn't replace Brave as the default search engine in the address bar. To do that, click the three-lines button in the top-right corner of the browser's window, and go to Settings > Search engine. You can click the Change buttons on this page to replace Brave Search with other options in the normal and private windows of the app.

Use Shields' content filters to block annoying website elements

Brave Shields adblocker settings.
Credit: Pranay Parab

While uBlock Origin remains my favorite ad blocker, you may not need to install it in Brave Browser, which has a competent ad blocker of its own called Brave Shields. Shields blocks ads, hides cookie notices, and removes a bunch of YouTube-specific annoyances, too. Shields is enabled by default, but it can do so much more if you enable additional features in settings. Go to Brave settings first (three-lines button > Settings), and open the Shields tab from the left pane. Go to Content filters > Show full list. Go through this list and enable all the options that appeal to you. I recommend the following:

  • Cookie notice blocker

  • Annoying distractions blocker

  • AI suggestions blocker

  • Newsletter popup blocker

  • YouTube Shorts blocker

  • YouTube thumbnail image blocker

  • Tracking URL blocker

  • Paywall blocker (a way to bypass some paywalls)

Turn off AI features

Brave ships with a built-in AI bot called Leo. While the company claims it's a privacy-first AI service, I'd personally rather disable the features altogether. If you feel the same way, you can go to Brave settings > Leo, and disable all the options on this page. While you're at it, you can also remove a bunch of these features from the address bar. Right-click the icons in the toolbar, and hide the following:

  • Brave Rewards (this icon is in the address bar)

  • Brave Wallet

  • Leo AI

  • Brave VPN

This will disable unwanted features and leave you with a clean address bar. You should also go to Brave settings > Appearance, and disable Leo AI assistant under "Show autocomplete suggestions in address bar."

Use "Memory Saver" to improve performance

Brave has a feature called Memory Saver to improve performance by suspending inactive tabs. You can enable this if you frequently open a lot of tabs and find your computer slowing down as a result. Go to Brave settings > System, and enable Memory Saver. Click the Add button below this feature to keep certain websites from being suspended in Brave.

Use Vertical Tabs to free up screen real estate

I prefer stacking the list of tabs vertically in most browsers, particularly when I'm using a larger display. This leaves more room for content, with a single toolbar up top and a vertical tab bar on the left. You can enable vertical tabs in Brave by going to Brave settings > Appearance > Tabs, and enabling Use vertical tabs. Once you do that, you should disable Show title bar to remove the extra horizontal bar from the top menu. This option merges the minimize, maximize, and close buttons with the toolbar for a streamlined look. Don't forget to click the minimize tabs button at the top of the tab bar to reduce the tab bar to a slim vertical column.

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Use Brave’s task manager to hunt down power-hungry tabs

Brave's built-in task manager.
Credit: Pranay Parab

If your browser is being slowed down by rogue tabs, you can use Brave's built-in task manager to sort things out. Press Shift-Esc with Brave open to access it and weed out resource-hungry tabs. If the keyboard shortcut doesn't work, click the three-lines button in the top-right corner, and go to More Tools > Task Manager.

A lot of links on the internet come with an unhelpful string of characters that can track your activity when browsing. Brave has a feature to help block this tracking data. Right-click any hyperlink in Brave, and select Copy Clean Link. This will remove tracking information from most types of links, but be aware that it won't be able to fix tracking via shortened links. You can also use Brave Shields to remove tracking parameters from links you click. To do this, go to Brave settings > Shields > Content filters > Show full list, and enable Tracking URL blocker.

Use "Force Paste" to get past copy-paste blocks on the web

Some websites block your ability to copy and paste information, which is extremely annoying. I'm still not sure why my bank thinks that stopping me from pasting my username or password is a great security feature. When you encounter such a site, you can right-click the form, and select Force Paste to bypass the block. Some sites go one step further and disable right-clicks too. You can get past that by using an extension like Enable right click.

Get YouTube Premium features for free

Brave blocks YouTube ads by default on both desktop and mobile. Since YouTube's ads are harder to block on mobile, I think the feature is much more valuable on Brave for iOS and Android. As such, I highly recommend switching from the YouTube app to Brave whenever you want to watch a video. While you're at it, you'll also notice that it lets you watch YouTube videos in picture-in-picture mode, and that you can play them in the background too. All of these are YouTube Premium features that you can get for free just by using Brave's mobile app.

Use Brave’s hidden dark mode

Much of the internet is still stuck in light mode, even for users with devices running in dark mode. While you can use a browser extension to force websites to use dark mode, Brave has a hidden feature that accomplishes the same. You can open brave://flags/#enable-force-dark using the address bar, and enable the flag to change all websites to a dark theme. This is better than using a browser extension: It uses fewer resources and is less of a privacy issue since no third-party companies can access your tabs. Note that you'll have to restart Brave once to start using the feature.

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Pranay Parab

Pranay Parab is an independent tech journalist based in Mumbai, India. He covers tech for Lifehacker, and specializes in tutorials and in-depth features.

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10 Hacks Every Android User Should Know

Identify battery-hungry apps, force dark mode system wide, and block ads and trackers.
Florence Ion
Add as a preferred source on Google illustration of holding an android phone with the android logo. A lightbulb is in the foreground
Credit: René Ramos/Lifehacker/Ljupco Smokovski/Stephen Orsillo/Africa Studio/Adobe Stock

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Android remains one of the most customizable mobile operating systems out there, despite Google's recent efforts to rein it in. You don't necessarily have to root your Android device to get it to do something off script, either. The fix you need might be hidden behind a system menu or Developer Options. You can personalize Android to address common frustrations with speed, battery life, privacy, and the interface as a whole. I've compiled ten helpful Android hacks that require no third-party apps, no ADB commands, and no rooting. All you need is the patience to dig through the operating system and tap as required.

Please note that many of these hacks require you to enable Developer Options, Android's hidden menu of settings. To do so, head to the Settings menu, scroll to About phone, then tap Build number. Tap it seven times to unlock developer mode. (You'll see a countdown pop-up if you did it correctly.)

Eliminate battery hogging apps

Have you ever looked at your battery usage stats and wondered what to do about a specific app that's draining your battery? Android needs apps to run in the background, sync with the cloud, and check for updates by default. As it does this, it wakes the device and consumes battery in the background.

Android introduced a battery optimization feature in version 6.0 that's supposed to help with apps that drain too much battery. While it's helped shut down unused apps, it can be either too aggressive or not aggressive enough at identifying bad apps. And while you can force-close an app to kill it when you notice it's causing issues, it will likely start up again the next time you reboot your device.

A screenshot showing how to restrict background processes on apps
Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

You can manually set an app's background privileges to the most restrictive setting without deleting or disabling it. In Settings, under Apps, scroll down and tap to view all your apps in a list. Then, tap App battery usage. Here, you will find details about the last time the app was accessed. Tap on the app to adjust its background usage. You can choose to have it optimized by the Android system or unrestricted—something you might use on a wearable to ensure it works properly, for instance. If you want it restricted completely, use the master switch to toggle off background usage. On Samsung devices, this same option is called "sleeping apps" or "deep sleeping apps."

A screenshot showing how to limite background processes in the developer options
Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

Optionally, you can turn to Developer Options to get more robust control over background processes. Head back to Developer Options, then scroll or search for Background process limit, and from here, you can decide how many background apps fire off at a time.

Block ads and trackers without VPN

Even with an ad blocker, background apps can still track your phone use, where you shop, and which ads to show you. You could easily circumvent this by installing a VPN app to route traffic, but that relies on a third party app, and slows down performance. You are better off configuring your phone's Private DNS settings to filter web traffic through a service of your choosing.

Private DNS seals the request your device makes to look up a website's IP address, so your carrier can't see the website you're visiting. Since that browser data stays hidden, third parties don't have the data they need to track your habits and, subsequently, target you with ads.

A screenshot showing where the private DNS option lives in the android settings panel
Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

Navigate back to the Settings panel and select Network & Internet > Private DNS. Change the setting to Private DNS provider hostname. You will need to find the URL of a filtering service to link here. Options include Ad Guard, Control D, and Mullvad, which is what I use to block ads in Chrome.

Once you save, this will redirect all DNS requests from every app and browser on your Android device through this specific block list. It should help cut down on ads and tracking servers watching you without cutting down on performance or battery life. This is also a great hack if you're a parent and your kid has access to an Android device. Use Private DNS to route them away from unsafe sites and adult content.

Unearth long-lost notifications

Sometimes, we accidentally dismiss a notification on Android. If you're always snoozing and missing out on important pings, you can turn on notification history.

a screenshot showing the toggle to turn on Notification history
Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

In Settings, under Notifications, tap to turn on Notification history. Now, when you swipe to dismiss your alerts, you can peek in here to see what you forgot or accidentally swiped away. This feature is also helpful for tracking any apps that might be quietly running in the background.

Maximize (or minimize) screen real estate

I don't know what it is about these latest versions of Android, but the text feels either too small or too big when adjusted with the built-in display size settings. You could go into the Accessibility settings to make the text smaller or larger, though it doesn't affect the rest of the interface much. Or you could deploy Android's display density (DPI) scaling hack.

Credit: Florence Ion / Lifehacker

This is where the developer options come in handy again. You can use the Smallest Width setting to control the DPI precisely, which scales every interface element up and down. Change the value to a higher number if you want fonts and images to shrink down within the resolution—if it starts in the 400s, for instance, try 500 and work backwards until you like what you see. To make fonts and graphics even larger, start around 300.

Adjust what happens when you plug your device in

When you plug an Android phone into a PC, it defaults to charging the device rather than turning on file transfer. You can change the option from the notification shade, though it adds a few extra steps to something that should be straightforward. Fortunately, you can tweak the USB default behavior to prioritize file transfers when the device is plugged in via USB-C.

Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

In the Developer Options, look for Default USB configuration. Change the setting to File Transfer/Android Auto. Test it by plugging a USB-C cable into a PC to ensure it defaults to file transfer mode.

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Get the best audio quality

When you stream music or podcasts through headphones or another external source, the audio isn't at its best. And while you could adjust the equalizer settings in the app that's streaming media, it won't fix much. Your phone and the audio device default to standard codecs rather than high-fidelity ones, which is why it doesn't sound as crisp and loud as it could.

Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

You can force Android to use the highest-quality codecs whenever the audio device connects in Developer Options. Search for a Bluetooth audio codec and select the highest-quality option supported by your wireless device. Note that you must be connected to the device when you look for this option, or it will appear grayed out. While you're in the Developer Options, look for Bluetooth Audio Sample Rate and Bits Per Sample. You can adjust these to higher sampling rates if your hardware supports it.

Make Android look smooth

Even on the latest Android flagships, the interface can feel sluggish as you're moving between screens. That's because Android deliberately animates between every swipe and flick. But you can eliminate or shorten these animations to make the interface feel more fluid.

Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

In Developer Options, look for Window animation scale, Transition animation scale, and Animator duration scale. You can adjust their defaults; the lower the number, the faster the animation. You can also choose to turn the animation off completely if it's just too much.  

Force dark mode

I suffer from migraines, and the brightest background can trigger the pain. I figured out how to force every Android app into dark mode, regardless of whether the developer coded it in.

Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

First, ensure "Dark Theme" is on in your main display settings. Then, navigate to Developer Options and search for Override force-dark. Toggle it on to save your eyes. This feature is also super helpful if you prefer to stare at the screen at night to read. Note that it may cause some apps not to display text properly, in which case, you might want to reserve this ability for when it's most necessary.

Keep the screen on forever

Sometimes you need the display to stay on without timing out. Most Android devices tap out at 30 minutes. But in the developer settings, there is an option to keep the screen "awake" as long as the device is plugged into a power source. I've had this feature enabled since I started covering Android phones. It's the best way to run benchmarks without being affected by random variables.  

Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

In Developer Options, search for Stay awake, then switch it on. Note that you will need to turn off the screen when charging the device overnight. Your phone could get hot from being connected and having the screen on for too long.

Get the right device to answer the phone

This has happened to me so many times: my phone rings, I answer it, but the call is routed to my smartwatch instead of my buds. While you could manually go into the phone and select the appropriate Bluetooth device, make it easier on yourself by eliminating the devices that you never want to answer the phone.  

Credit: Florence Ion/Lifehacker

In the Settings panel, under Bluetooth, select the offending device. The easiest way to keep it from rearing its ugly head is to find the switch that completely disables phone calls. You should see an option for it at the bottom of the device's Bluetooth settings. I've disabled the Pixel Watch 4 from answering any calls because there's no instance I'd ever want to take a call from my watch. It's too public!

Florence Ion

I cover Android, smartphones, and the smart home. Sometimes, I cover Windows and streaming, too!

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