A trivial thing perhaps but it’s harder than you think to change browsers.
I have used Chrome for well over 20 years (probably more than 30). It’s not perfect, it has many psycho-social-political issues against its use and there are a fair few features it lacks that are offered by other browsers (better tab organisation, bookmark tricks, password management etc.) but every time I try to change (have tried vivaldi, opera, arc, brave, among others) it takes so long to master them that I have to continue to use Chrome in parallel while learning. In the end it just takes too much time and gets in the way of the flow. So, I always end up back with Chrome.
Thus I recently made the decision not to fret about the politics lying behind browser choice and put the temptations of ‘better’ browsers behind me. After all, I am less than a microbial dot in the sea of Chrome’s nefarious uses of my personal data. And what Google provides is so useful and familiar (esp Gmail and Docs) the socio-political risks are worth taking.
Things could change. If Trump does manage to force Google to sell off Chrome, that could be an opportunity to change esp if the buyer is a worse dog …