• Schwim Dandy
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    141 year ago

    I’m sorry but I don’t see how that check is browser-specific. Is that part happening on the browser side?

    • @[email protected]
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      261 year ago

      They don’t need to put incriminating “if Firefox” statements in their code – the initial page request would have included the user agent and it would be trivial to serve different JavaScript based on what it said.

      • @[email protected]
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        221 year ago

        Easy enough to test though. Load the page with a UA changer and see if it still shows up when Firefox pretends to be Chrome

        • @TastehWaffleZ
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          1 year ago

          The video in the linked article does just that. The page takes 5 seconds to load the video, the user changes the UA, they refresh the page and suddenly the video loads instantly. I would have liked to see them change the UA back to Firefox to prove it’s not some weird caching issue though

      • @nixcamic
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        81 year ago

        I guess his question is “is that happening?”

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          I don’t know, nor am I speculating. The person I was replying to said they didn’t see a browser check in the code, which isn’t enough to dismiss it.