• Gameboy Homeboy
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    1 year ago

    I feel like I’ve been forced to switch a lot of my default applications lately based on shitty decisions from tone deaf companies. I guess I’m going to move from Brave to Firefox finally.

    • @[email protected]
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      371 year ago

      Made the switch recently myself and can never look back. Being able to install custom add-ons on mobile is a huge plus to me

    • @Melco
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      341 year ago

      deleted by creator

    • @[email protected]
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      281 year ago

      Why did you chose Brave to begin with? Serious question, not being snarky. I tried it for a day and it just didn’t compete with Firefox + uBlock Origin in any meaningful way. I don’t see the appeal of bundling advanced security and filtering tools with the browser, it’s better if they’re separate entities, keeps everyone honest.

      • @what
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        71 year ago

        I’ve taught multiple people in my life to use brave. The vast majority of end users simply can’t be bothered to install a plugin or understand how to manage it when a site breaks. Brave makes it just a little more intuitive for them and means less IT calls for me. Firefox with ublock is what I personally use. Brave is what my family uses.

          • @what
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            21 year ago

            Brave has a button right next the task bar they can use to toggle off controls. I know ublock is stupid simple to do that too but the extra step of going to plugins then settings has lost people in my experience.

            • @[email protected]
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              31 year ago

              uBlock has a button next to the search bar, you can hide it, but I’m pretty sure it’s shown by default. It’s 2 clicks, but it’s just the shield icon (which I’m just realizing has uO on it instead of uBO, is that the official abbreviation?) then a big ass Power button. Either way, in my experience, anyone I try to set up with anything other than Edge, ends up back on it within a month because the dark patterns work and they get tricked into it :(

    • @SupraMario
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      61 year ago

      Moving browsers used to be moved the webpages now…it’s a massive deal now.

      • @Sirosky
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        251 year ago

        Chrome is a chip off the old block, in addition to just being the worse browser anyway.

      • @flucksy_bango
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        21 year ago

        You could say the exact same thing about YouTube and it’d be just as wrong.

      • @[email protected]
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        01 year ago

        Even if I go along that line of thought, few years ago when I was using Chrome it started scanning my computer without any notice, causing the fan to run hard.

        I stopped using that creepy POS immediately and switched to Firefox. Never again a browser can just make a decision to scan my computer to “protect” me from whatever.

  • @[email protected]
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    761 year ago

    If this DRM can force you to use Chromium to display a webpage or content, that would be the most anticompetitive thing in recent times, and would absolutely not fly.

    • @[email protected]
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      641 year ago

      That’s why they want to make it a web standard, so they can just blame Firefox and others for not following the standard and avoid EU fines.

      That’s what Microsoft did with their office document standard.

      • @[email protected]
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        191 year ago

        Yeah, the sad thing here is that if Apple comply, it will basically become a standard and there’s nothing that Firefox or anything else can do about it. If they can get it on iPhone, it’s game over. Half the web will be blocked unless you agree to see adverts.

        • @mothringer
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          131 year ago

          If they can get it on iPhone, it’s game over.

          While this is true, I struggle to understand how Apple would stand to gain from implementing this unless it had already become a widespread standard. It’s also an opportunity for more privacy focused marketing if they oppose it, just like they do with government attempts to force them to implement backdoors into iOS.

          • @[email protected]
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            71 year ago

            Yeah, they already dont bother implementing a bunch of actual standards. I don’t see what they would get out of this since their ad network is very limited

      • deejay4am
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        61 year ago

        Good thing Google is not a recognized standards body

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        I have limited understanding of the technical side of this issue, but based on this comment, this sounds like a brilliant move by Google - Don’t like the rules of the game, change the game…

        Edit: for clarification, this comment was very tongue in cheek - I don’t support Google, this was just an acknowledgement of a smart business play.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          an acknowledgement of a smart business play.

          When politicians do it, it’s “corruption.” When normal people do it, it’s “crime.” When capitalist parasites do it, it’s “smart business.”

        • deejay4am
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          31 year ago

          We need to stop this capitalist brainrot. It’s not a smart business move; a smart business move would be one where everyone wins. This is a lazy and evil move designed for pure extraction of value and coercion of compliance.

          Live the way we want you to (and we take 30% off the top!)

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            `I mean, yes, agreed. But this is literally how businesses operate - stay ahead of governments, or change the game so govts are onboard (as regulation regularly trails behind business). A genuinely smart business move would obviously be preferable, but the modern history of megacorps is not exactly a shining beacon of benevolence to the ppl. It should be, but gestures wildly at everything

            Edit: exchanged “always” for “regularly”

            • deejay4am
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              11 year ago

              the modern history of megacorps is not exactly a shining beacon of benevolence to the ppl

              I mean, yes, agreed. But why does anyone think that that’s ok?

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          While I have issues with the rules of “the game”, the current rules are better than the changes that Google are proposing, but since they are infinitely more powerful than me, I can only hope whatever body (W3C?) does not make it an official standard. As long as it’s just an extra thing that Chrome/Chromium does, there’s still hope for Google to get into legal trouble.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Fingers crossed that you’re right. Definitely don’t want to see them repositioning into an (even more) advantageous policy position. I imagine that a standards body such as the one you mentioned would be fairly careful about adopting anything proposed by a company without significant caution. At least that’s how it works with some international standards agencies haha

  • WaffleFriends
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    541 year ago

    Can someone explain to me the google API and DRM situation in stupid people terms? I’m stupidly tech illiterate but I know that this is a big deal and I would like to understand

    • @[email protected]OP
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      751 year ago

      Sure thing. With this current proposal, when you visit a website, the site asks your browser if you’re willing to display it as intended, basically with all and any adverts. If the answer is no, then you can’t see the content, if the answer is yes, then you’re likely using Chrome or a Chromium based browser and Google can guarantee more ad impressions, because they’re first and foremost an advert selling company.

      • @donnachaidh
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        251 year ago

        I may not be 100% right, as I haven’t looked at it in detail, but I think it’s even a bit more than that. Since the way that’s proven is by the browser vendor signing the request (I assume with an HTTP header or something), you could also verify it’s from a specific vendor. So even if Mozilla says, yes, we’ll display your ads, a website could still lock down to Chrome. It would probably also significantly hamper new browsers, and browsers with a security/anti-ad focus, as they won’t be recognised by major websites that use the new protocol until they have market share, which they won’t get if they don’t have access to major websites.

        • @bob_wiley
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          1 year ago

          deleted by creator

          • @donnachaidh
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            161 year ago

            A) Maybe not you, maybe not me or anyone else here, but 99.99% of the rest of the world? And when the rest leave, is Mozilla really going to be able to justify maintaining a browser for those that remain? B) There might not be a website that would do it, but what about if practically all websites with any corporate backing did it?

            • @JubilantJaguar
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              61 year ago

              This is the fundamental point that so many techies fail to get. Saying “I’ll be fine, I’ll do X” is irrelevant. If nobody’s doing what you want to do, then eventually you won’t be able to do it either.

        • Pennomi
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          51 year ago

          I mean, they already do that by filtering out user agents. But this is certainly a step beyond.

          • fuzzzerd
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            71 year ago

            Which is why all browsers cross identify as other browsers. This would make it easier for sites to block and harder for browsers to work around.

      • WaffleFriends
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        51 year ago

        Thanks so much, I understand now. God, is that a shitty move for Google to pull

      • wanderingmagus
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        41 year ago

        Why can’t your browser lie and say “yes of course I’m displaying everything my fingers definitely aren’t crossed behind my back”?

        • @DrQuint
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          71 year ago

          Because it’s not just going to say yes. It’s going to say yes, and then present an unique key that browser made for themselves. Other browsers might be able to spoof the key, but the proposal might have cryptographically expensive to even try.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          11 year ago

          Your device would return a signature to say that there’s no adblocking software on the device.

          • wanderingmagus
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            21 year ago

            And that signature can’t be spoofed? Or the browser can’t be sandboxed and quarantined so it is made unaware of such software, and the software applied retroactively?

            • @[email protected]OP
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              11 year ago

              People will always find a workaround, look at rooting of phones for example. But they shouldn’t have to. I mean look at how banking apps refuse to work on rooted phones but work in a browser on your desktop without any issues. It will be the same with this. Your device is rooted, we can’t show you this webpage.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        That’s not true - you can still use ad blockers etc as normal.

        It’s also not a browser check, it’s a device check. It’s to check that the device can be trusted, like android itself hasn’t been tampered with.

        • rainh
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          1 year ago

          That’s equally stupid though… why shouldn’t I be able to tamper with my phone’s operating system? And how is it any of a website’s business if I do?

          • @[email protected]
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            -51 year ago

            You can tamper all you want, but apps can already block access to devices that have been tampered with. This just gives that same power to websites.

            • rainh
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              51 year ago

              … yes, and I am obviously very against giving that same power to websites lol. An app is built from the ground up as a UX created by the company, and that is what you are signing up for when you use an app. A browser should be a contained way of rendering data from some webserver according to a user’s preferences. Google is apparently trying to “app-ify” web protocols in order to give themselves more power over a user’s experience to the detriment of the user.

        • conciselyverbose
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          101 year ago

          It’s literallly impossible for there to be a valid reason for a website to be entitled to know that under any circumstances.

        • DarkThoughts
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          41 year ago

          So people with custom roms or on various Linux distros would be fucked?

            • DarkThoughts
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              21 year ago

              True, but that’s within their own ecosystem. The internet is not owned by Google. But I guess a certain part of the majority wants it that way with how popular Chromium based browsers are.

        • @whatsarefoogee
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          -11 year ago

          How could it not be a browser check if the website relies on the browser to be a middle man? The WebDRM that was pushed by a terrorist organization W3C, currently requires per-browser licensing.

          Per wikipedia:

          EME has been highly controversial because it places a necessarily proprietary, closed decryption component which requires per-browser licensing fees into what might otherwise be an entirely open and free software ecosystem.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            lol are the downvotes for the terrorist bit?

            A device check is inherently a browser check, you’re absolutely right and the other person is confused. Or shilling has already arrived to lemmy, idk. “Google isn’t nefariously using this ability that we actually haven’t yet given them” is a bizarre argument.

    • janAkali
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      1 year ago

      I bet you heard about safetynet on android devices. It is a service that checks if you run a genuine licensed not-modified version of android. If not - app developer can just restrict you access to the app. It is mostly used by banking apps, but there’re many examples of not security critical apps utilize this.
      Google wants to do the same but for browsers and websites. If you run firefox or modified chrome or use adblocks: youtube, twitter, etc. would be able to detect it and can restrict access to the website.

      • TWeaK
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        11 year ago

        SafetyNet is fairly easy to defeat.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          If you root your device correctly. Can’t expect most mobile users to do that. Can’t expect users with locked bootloaders to do that. Can’t even expect many power users to do that. A lot of very tech literate people I know that customise their computer OS heavily still don’t want to root their phone.

    • b14700
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      41 year ago

      if they dont like your browser you cant view the site , ultimately its gonna be google who will be deciding what conditions your browser has to fulfill to be approved and the big one they wont say outright is adblockers , if you have an adblocker they will not allow you to veiw the site

    • b14700
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      11 year ago

      if they dont like your browser you cant view the site , ultimately its gonna be google who will be deciding what conditions your browser has to fulfill to be approved and the big one they wont say outright is adblockers , if you have an adblocker they will not allow you to veiw the site

  • Xero
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    331 year ago

    I hope EU steps in this time too

  • Raltoid
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    1 year ago

    They try to present it as “detecting abuse”, but it’s literally just “allow servers to block non-verified browers”(in other words google blocking access to their services for non-chrome users(the people proposing it work for google)).

    And as always these types of asshats always shit all over anyone using accessbility tools(or don’t even consider them in the first place, which amounts to the same thing).

    • average lemmy user
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      61 year ago

      i personally don’t understand why companies overlook accessbility, is it to save profits?

      • @jumperalex
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        61 year ago

        why did you waste your time asking that question when you already knew the answer?

        It’s always the profits!!!

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          I get it costs money to develop accessibility, but you can’t rip off a blind man if he can’t navigate your sight. I truly don’t get it.

          Edit: site, not sight

          • @Eranziel
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            31 year ago

            They’ve simply run the numbers and decided it would cost more to support the blind man’s access than they could get from plundering the blind man.

          • @jumperalex
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            31 year ago

            I want to laugh but … well … I’m not crying YOU’RE CRYING

    • @257m
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      1 year ago

      Removed by mod

      • @jumperalex
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        51 year ago

        pretty much yes to keys and hashes. Just think HDCP and HDMI

        That said, I imagine it’ll have to be easier to hack software that isn’t embedded in hardware. but it’s also easier to issue revocation lists when you don’t have to worry about bricking everyone’s hardware. So I have no idea which way that balance tilts.

    • @ocassionallyaduck
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      21 year ago

      “Listen, if we didn’t think about it, it’s clearly not important.”

      • Google
  • @Jmr
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    221 year ago

    If this goes through. Will Google become a browser monopoly and (hopefully) get sued

  • _galactose
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    181 year ago

    Have slowly been switching to Firefox for a couple of months, but the DRM proposal has gotten me to fully switch.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      31 year ago

      Thank you. You’re only one person, but the world is just particles. If enough of us come together, we will be something tangible.

      • @ocassionallyaduck
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        21 year ago

        I still use panorama tab groups.

        It’s a former Firefox feature made into an extension. Still great.

      • @itadakimasu
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        11 year ago

        Edge’s left sidebar vertical tabs has ruined me. Plz add this Mozilla, and I’m all in on Foxy Fox

        • Kevin
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          11 year ago

          Sidebery is a saviour for me and very likely you too. I’ve got 1500 tabs just lying there in my sidebar, inactive and neatly grouped together!

  • 𝐘Ⓞz҉
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    171 year ago

    Fucking US and all their shitty companies. literally a big FU

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    I still don’t get where this proposal originated. It looks like a random user, what’s their connection to Google and why do we believe it’s even under consideration by the organisation?

    Also, <3 ff

    • @[email protected]OP
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      201 year ago

      No organisations put things through in giant blazing neon letters. One employee quietly pushes a bit, another a different bit and ten bits later we’re all like, WTF?

      Google has been trying to ensure they can serve everyone ads for a while. There’s a reason the author of uBlock clearly states that the Chrome version isn’t as good.

      • snarf
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        31 year ago

        I miss old Google that refused to use anything but small text boxes for advertising. Shit, I saw they actually put an ad in the search history drop-down of the Play Store app now.

    • @donnachaidh
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      41 year ago

      You get to Google pretty quickly by following links. If you look at the top of the linked issue, it links to a few things owned by Rupert Ben Wiser. If you follow the explainer link, you get this list of authors:

      Authors: Ben Wiser (Google) Borbala Benko (Google) Philipp Pfeiffenberger (Google) Sergey Kataev (Google)

      And in the repo, he says it’s being prototyped in Chromium.

      That’s all written by him though, so I guess he could just be lying and making up names. So I tried looking up his name, to see if he’s listed anywhere as a Google employee, but the best I could find is he’s listed as a Google employee since 2022 on Facebook and LinkedIn. And he doesn’t have much on his Github. (I kinda feel a little stalkery now… Don’t harass anyone please). So either this is an elaborate, very late, April fool’s or he’s probably the fall guy for whatever exec actually thought this up.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        I wasn’t really doubting that he was a Google employee, rather more questioning whether the corporation (bare in mind it’s huge) is aware of his efforts and this is on their immediate roadmap. It could just be a bunch of employees trying something about/proposing it internally and it might get shot down.

        But I take the other commenter’s point that this is how it begins

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      Def not a random user, it came from a committee. There’s an attendees list and meeting notes attached to it if you click around a bit