Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
User Cooperative calls itself “the people's tech company,” and its core product, Surge Browser, is positioned as “the people's web browser.” Based on the scraped page content, this appears to be a browser project framed around the idea of a user cooperative. The site offers a Mac download and encourages users to learn about the company, join a waitlist, or support more devices through Chip In. The page also includes links such as User Dividends, User Governance, and Articles of Incorporation, suggesting that its main differentiation lies more in user rights, governance, and organizational structure than in traditional browser performance metrics.
At present, only a limited set of features can be confirmed from the page content: Surge Browser can be used for web browsing and already provides a Mac download link. There are also basic resources such as the Surge User Guide, privacy policy, and terms of service. However, details such as supported languages/frameworks, browser engine, extension mechanism, developer tools, sync capabilities, security sandboxing, and privacy-protection implementation are not disclosed. For the “developer tools” category, the page does not show information about APIs, SDKs, plugin ecosystems, CLI tools, self-hosting, or integrations with GitHub, CI/CD, cloud services, or other developer ecosystems. As a result, it cannot yet be considered a mature developer platform.
The page does not disclose a specific pricing model, nor does it provide information about free/paid tiers, subscriptions, enterprise plans, or payment methods. “Chip In” may be a donation or crowdfunding-style support entry point, but the page does not explain amounts, benefits, or refund rules, so it should not be treated as a clear pricing plan. In terms of support, only links such as Contact Us, News and Content, and User Guide are visible. There is no description of an SLA, ticketing system, community forum, or enterprise support.
Its strength is a clear positioning: it attempts to differentiate itself from mainstream browsers through user governance, user dividends, and a cooperative structure. The availability of a Mac download also lowers the barrier for early users to try it. The drawbacks are equally clear: there is not enough technical product information, and platform coverage is currently only confirmed for Mac. Its open-source status, privacy implementation, ecosystem compatibility, extension support, and business model are all unclear. It is better suited to early Mac users interested in internet governance, cooperative economics, and experimental browser models. Enterprise development teams or users who rely on a stable developer toolchain should wait for more documentation and ecosystem information.
The scraped page content does not provide information about access from mainland China, payments, or localization, so china_access can only be marked as unknown. If access is unstable, common alternatives include Chrome, Firefox, Brave, Safari, Edge, and Arc. If open source and privacy are the main priorities, Firefox and Brave currently offer greater transparency.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on theusercooperative.com official site.
theusercooperative.com is an United States Downloads provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach theusercooperative.com directly.