No, because we already have some really really good free options. Closest I'd get to paying is Brave, which is built on Chromium anyway and does crypto micro-transactions for ads etc.
1. It could be bundled into my monthly internet bill
2. The fee was not more than 10 USD
3. The browser had actively developed ad blocking and
4. Nuisance blocking and
5. Tracking protection and
6. The browser used less memory than competitors
By nuisances I mean cookie notifications, subscription requests, anti-ad-blocking messages, etc. By actively developed I mean I get an update every month, and the developers are actively testing and researching the features. Strict standards compliance could take a back seat to these features, as long as it could adequately render a page. Features that might make up for one of the desiderata above would be
1. Media ripping (if this could be done in a way that would respect publisher rights) or
2. Macros, down to mouse movements and key presses
3 comments
[ 2.1 ms ] story [ 19.0 ms ] thread1. It could be bundled into my monthly internet bill
2. The fee was not more than 10 USD
3. The browser had actively developed ad blocking and
4. Nuisance blocking and
5. Tracking protection and
6. The browser used less memory than competitors
By nuisances I mean cookie notifications, subscription requests, anti-ad-blocking messages, etc. By actively developed I mean I get an update every month, and the developers are actively testing and researching the features. Strict standards compliance could take a back seat to these features, as long as it could adequately render a page. Features that might make up for one of the desiderata above would be
1. Media ripping (if this could be done in a way that would respect publisher rights) or
2. Macros, down to mouse movements and key presses