• @solrize
    link
    178 months ago

    How about stopping link hover from showing its own nonsense in the status line, Mozilla. The status line should always show the real link destination.

    • @something_random_tho
      link
      178 months ago

      It could only know that by navigating to the link in the background. That would have side effects, like them being able to track you even when you don’t click on links.

      • @solrize
        link
        88 months ago

        If the link is to a redirector then that’s what should show in the status line.

      • @grue
        link
        English
        58 months ago

        Fine! If there’s Javascript fuckery going on, then the status line should say “WARNING: JAVASCRIPT FUCKERY!”

        • Bezier
          link
          fedilink
          78 months ago

          But it doesn’t always point to the destination. Instead, it points to another page that then redirects you to the destination.

          Your browser does not know the address of the destination, only the addresss of the middleman tracking webpage.

        • @something_random_tho
          link
          58 months ago

          The point of this is that it’s a redirect. The link isn’t taking you to xyz.com, it’s going to abc.com which redirects to xyz.com. The abc.com server redirects to the second link – there’s no way to know where it’ll take you unless you follow it.

      • @solrize
        link
        -4
        edit-2
        7 months ago

        No it’s the browser’s fault for enabling the deception. You have to assume that any given website is malicious. The browser is a security product that is supposed to be on our side and protect us from evil websites. Blaming the website for exploiting protection failures puts the responsibility in the wrong place. It’s like taking counterfeit antibiotics, getting sick, and blaming the germs.