Although many ad-blockers have migrated to Manifest V3 versions, these are generally less capable of detecting and blocking promoted targeted content.
Although Microsoft Edge, Mozilla Firefox, and Apple Safari have all adopted MV3, they have done so with their own implementation modifications, allowing users greater freedom while still benefiting from the security enhancements.
Still, support for MV2 is the only way to go for older add-ons, and Firefox reiterated via an announcement today that it will continue to support it in the foreseeable future.
“While some browsers are phasing out Manifest V2 entirely, Firefox is keeping it alongside Manifest V3,” said Mozilla.
Glad to hear Firefox is doing the dual-support thing.
If you’re talking about the protocol that allowed things like flash, that was the right decision and the web is much better off without it. It was a security nightmare and no functionality was lost in the long run.
sometime in the not-to-distant future, like when default search engine contract is due for renewal:
google: “remember when you tried a different default search engine? that didn’t go over so well–for you. your rep tanked and you bled users the entire time. disable mv2 or you’ll be paying us for the privilege of even having google search in your browser at all.”
From the article …
Glad to hear Firefox is doing the dual-support thing.
Firefox made a big mistake of breaking ad-on compatibility in the past. Let’s not make that mistake again.
If you’re talking about the protocol that allowed things like flash, that was the right decision and the web is much better off without it. It was a security nightmare and no functionality was lost in the long run.
RIP Autohide. Never used full screen again after Firefox version 4.
sometime in the not-to-distant future, like when default search engine contract is due for renewal:
google: “remember when you tried a different default search engine? that didn’t go over so well–for you. your rep tanked and you bled users the entire time. disable mv2 or you’ll be paying us for the privilege of even having google search in your browser at all.”