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Brave Software releases Origin for a paid, bloat-free browsing experience

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Brave has announced the public release of Brave Origin, a paid minimalist version of its browser that strips out cryptocurrency, AI, rewards, and other monetization-focused features. [...]

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    Brave Software releases Origin for a paid, bloat-free browsing experience By Lawrence Abrams June 4, 2026 05:37 PM 0 Brave Software has announced the public release of Origin, a paid minimalist, bloat-free version of its browser that strips out cryptocurrency, AI, rewards, and other monetization-focused features. The browser maker says Brave Origin is designed for users who want a more streamlined, privacy-focused browser without the company's optional revenue-generating services and integrations. "Today, Brave is announcing the release of Brave Origin, a paid version of the browser for users who don't need all of Brave's out-of-the-box features, but still want the privacy that only Brave offers," the company explains. According to Brave, the browser turns off features such as Brave Rewards, Brave Wallet, Brave VPN promotions, Brave Leo AI, Brave News, Brave Talk, sponsored images, and other promotional or monetization components included in the standard browser. The company says Brave Origin continues to include Brave Shields, the browser's built-in privacy and ad-blocking protections. Brave Origin is available as both a standalone browser download and as an upgrade option for existing Brave installations. The company says the license is a one-time purchase of $59.99 US that can be used to activate the software on up to 10 devices. Users installing the Linux version can get Brave Origin for free. The Brave Origin launch has raised some criticism from users who argue that Brave is effectively charging users to remove features that many already considered unnecessary and unwanted in the first place. "My criticism is that Brave started by selling users a browser that protected them from the web's monetization layers. Over time, the browser itself became another monetization layer," a user posted on Reddit. "And now Brave Origin basically confirms the problem: if you want the clean, stripped-down, privacy-focused version, that becomes the paid product." Others pointed out that many of the features being removed can already be disabled in the free Brave version via enterprise group policies. Due to this, some users questioned whether Brave Origin introduces any meaningful differences beyond packaging those configuration settings into an easier-to-use interface. Defenders of the project argue that most users are unlikely to manually configure enterprise policies, making Brave Origin a more accessible way to obtain a cleaner privacy-oriented browser, while also supporting the privacy project. Test every layer before attackers do Security teams log 54% of successful attacks and alert on just 14%. The rest move through your environment unseen. The Picus whitepaper shows how breach and attack simulation tests your SIEM and EDR rules so threats stop slipping by detection. Get the whitepaper Related Articles: This $95 Surfshark bundle includes VPN, antivirus & data broker removal for a year Google Chrome adds session cookie theft protection for all users Microsoft backpedals: Edge to stop loading passwords into memory Android 17 to expand banking scam call and privacy protections GM agrees to $12.75M California settlement over sale of drivers’ data
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    Bleeping Computer
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    ◇ Industry News & Leadership
    Published
    Jun 05, 2026
    Archived
    Jun 05, 2026
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