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chovy
chovy

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Your Bookmarks Are Trapped — Here's How to Free Them

If you use more than one browser, you already know the pain: bookmarks don't follow you.

Chrome syncs to Google. Safari syncs to iCloud. Firefox syncs to Mozilla. Brave, Vivaldi, Arc — they all have their own sync systems (or none at all). The moment you switch browsers, your bookmarks stay behind.

The Problem

Every browser vendor treats bookmarks as a retention tool, not a user feature. They want your bookmarks locked in their ecosystem because it makes switching harder. It's a soft lock-in strategy that nobody talks about.

For developers especially, this is annoying. You might use Chrome for work (DevTools), Firefox for privacy testing, Safari for iOS debugging, and Brave for personal browsing. Four browsers, four separate bookmark collections. Good luck keeping them in sync manually.

The Options

There are a few approaches to solving this:

1. Export/Import (the manual way)
Every browser supports HTML bookmark export. You can periodically export from one and import into another. It works, but it's tedious and one-directional. No real sync.

2. Self-hosted solutions (Floccus + Nextcloud/WebDAV)
If you run your own Nextcloud or WebDAV server, Floccus can sync bookmarks across browsers using your own infrastructure. Great for privacy purists, but requires server maintenance.

3. Lightweight browser extensions
This is where tools like MarkSyncr come in. It's a free web extension for Chrome, Safari, and Firefox that syncs your bookmarks across all three without needing a server, an account, or any cloud lock-in. Install the extension in each browser and your bookmarks stay in sync.

Why It Matters

Browser diversity is healthy for the web. But vendor lock-in through bookmarks (and passwords, and history) works against it. The easier it is to move between browsers, the more freedom users have — and the more pressure browser vendors feel to compete on actual features rather than switching costs.

If you've been stuck in one browser partly because your bookmarks are there, maybe it's time to break free.


What's your setup? Do you use one browser for everything, or do you juggle multiple? How do you handle bookmark sync? Would love to hear what works for people.

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