• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Looks like it’s already flipped to true in Librewolf, glad they seem to have some common sense compared to mozilla.

    Is there any good reason for a browser to mask the real URLs like that? There seems to be a trend of hiding parts of the URL people see lately.

    • Turun
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      281 year ago

      Yes, because the internet is not restricted to English letters.

      Just imagine you had to visit アップル instead of apple.com! And most importantly, would you trust yourself to see the difference that and say プッアル consistently without seeing the real reference?

      Just to be clear, I hate it when the browsers hides part of the url too. Show me the https god damn! But internationalization is a good thing, as it makes the internet accessible to more people.

      • @PixxlMan
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        131 year ago

        Stop it! The only words that matter are those that can be written in ASCII! The rest of the world just wants to scare you with gibberish letters!

    • @[email protected]
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      221 year ago

      People who use those characters benefit from it. I imagine 點看 is more useful than xn–c1yn36f to a Chinese person. That’s also why Google displays them that way.

      It would be nice if browsers warned when International Domain Names were in use, and provided the option to disable punycode when first encountered.

      • @9point6
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        1 year ago

        This is the big thing that should be happening, even just a little icon in the bar when it’s happening to switch between the two representations.