I don't think anyone was objecting to it. It just seems like a rather pointless browser to launch when it offers no advantage over existing browsers that do the same thing better.
You're not framing︂ our criticism correctly. The reason this browser is likely dead on arrival (outside of Zoho's︃ most ardent fans) is it's competing against other, well-established browsers in the same niche of︄ the market without any advantages. If they had picked another base, such as Firefox or︅ WebKit, it could have been an advantage and something new and interesting on the market.︆
It would be great if Ulaa is successful and does what it says it'll do.︇ As long as it's closed source, though, I wouldn't put any trust in it doing︈ what it claims to do. Why trust Ulaa without being able to verify, when you︉ can both trust and verify others?