• @RagingSnarkasm
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    893 months ago

    Hey Chrome, you remember when Internet Explorer had a lock on the installed user base? Do you remember when they shit all over their users to the point they were screaming for anything to replace it?

    Pepperidge Farms remembers.

  • @800XL
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    493 months ago

    Google: “We mean it this time, guys.”

  • @[email protected]
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    333 months ago

    2035 2028: Browser content is piped to a local AI that filters junk and noise then feeds the result back into the browser for screen display

  • @werefreeatlast
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    313 months ago

    They can shovel it. It’s no longer on my computer.

  • @mlg
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    263 months ago

    I hope this convinces project managers and OEMs to stop using embedded chrome too. Would kill google’s market share quicker and keep HTTP a cleaner standard instead of a walled of garden of google tech.

  • @TrickDacy
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    133 months ago

    The chrome simps got their excuses on deck for continuing to use that bullshit

  • Bobby Turkalino
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    83 months ago

    Wasn’t able to find an answer to my main question in the article: will this kill uBlock Origin’s ability to block YouTube ads?

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      Edit: of course the below only applies to chrome and possibly chrome derivatives - FF is keeping MV2

      It’ll make it a lot more likely that YouTube ads will get through because MV3 limits the block list size to a fraction of the size normally used by uBO and also disallows external/live updates to the block list, instead forcing the rules to be baked into the extension. Meaning an update to the blocking rules could take a week of extension review time to go through. I heard that the YouTube ad blocking rules can update multiple times a day so this would easily allow Google to update their ad code before approving updates to ad blockers, allowing them to always stay ahead.

      So it might not outright break it, but some rules will have to be left off so it seems like it’ll be a dice roll if you get an ad where the blocking rule had to be left off to fit Google’s block list limit or the rule you have is stale because it took a couple weeks for the extension update to be approved on the extension store.

      The feature of MV3 that enables these changes is that in MV3, the extension is handing over the complete blocklist to chrome, which does the blocking and gets to put limits on the blocklist. In MV2, the extension is given a direct hook to do the blocking itself, so it can have an unlimited block list size and can source the blocklist from anywhere. Think of it kind of like the difference between letting a graduation speaker speak off the cuff vs the school reviewing the speech beforehand and having their finger on the mic switch in case you wander off script. So the new system technically can be more secure and performant because the blocklist is reviewed as part of the extension and because poorly written blocker code can’t slow you down (only Google’s optimized logic is allowed to run) but it only works if they don’t impose limits lower than what effective ad blockers need (ie updating frequently like daily and allowing a large blocklist). Plus uBo is written really well for resource usage so it’s getting crippled even though it’s a shining example of an effective ad blocker.

      Plus there are even more limitations like certain types of advanced rules that all I understand is just needed for certain sites that are tricky., but those rules aren’t supported in MV3. The uBo GitHub wiki has some information about this: https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBOL-home/wiki/Frequently-asked-questions-(FAQ)#filtering-capabilities-which-cant-be-ported-to-mv3

    • @yesman
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      153 months ago

      will this kill uBlock Origin’s ability to block YouTube ads?

      that’s it’s raison d’etre

    • LazaroFilm
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      103 months ago

      Wether it is or not, the sheer fact that they’re pulling those moves made me move away from Chrome.

    • @grue
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      73 months ago

      uBlock Origin has already been letting some Youtube ads through on my Chromebook in the last few days. (Still been working perfectly on Firefox on my desktop, though.)

      It’s getting real close to time to finally bite the bullet and nuke ChromeOS in favor of normal Linux.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    Fun story, I tried Vivaldi a few weeks ago. It’s based on chrome. And it got really sluggish and I didn’t understand what was going on. It was so much slower than Firefox at rendering pages too!

    Went back to Firefox with a new appriciation for how good it is.

    They have nothing like container tabs either and you are supposed to use entire browser profiles to isolate cookies. It’s just ridiculous.