cross-posted from: https://lemmy.blackeco.com/post/25574

And since you won’t be able to modify web pages, it will also mean the end of customization, either for looks (ie. DarkReader, Stylus), conveniance (ie. Tampermonkey) or accessibility.

The community feedback is… interesting to say the least.

It does seem that using Chrome (or Chrome based browsers) is just going to going to perpetuate this. Firefox has never been more important IMHO.

  • exohuman
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    5711 months ago

    This is why tech monopolies are bad. Google waited until they had a near monopoly on the browser engine and then pulls this shit. Alternatives still exist though, and people will vote with their actions by either not using Chrome or not using those websites that have DRM.

    • @CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlOPM
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      11 months ago

      I fear the number of sites taking that hit would be so many that we may feel excluded from the web. It feels really dangerous and we need more people on FF asap to make it clear to businesses that this is too costly to be worth it and they’re losing a lot of users.

  • fiat_lux
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    11 months ago

    Bug: violation of w3c code of ethics issue was opened 15 hours ago.

    It was closed 14 hours ago with the status “completed” without further comment.

    The guy who closed it posted an entry a day earlier called “So, you don’t like a web platform proposal” on his rarely used blog. It has the appearance of telling people how to critique proposals in a professional way, while being completely dismissive of any communication attempts simultaneously. Perhaps he needs to reflect a little more on his blog entry’s subheading “We’re all humans”, because he doesn’t seem keen to address how users who rely on Assistive Technology are going to be able to use his DRM Web.

    Edited to add: The code of ethics is for people who work at the W3c, so not entirely applicable anyway.

  • @frustbox@lemmy.ml
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    4711 months ago

    You should absolutely have web environment integrity. Your browser should not allow the website to do things that you don’t approve of, so the integrity of your computer can be ensured.

    Wait, that’s not what they mean, is it? Oh no … 🙄

    Yea, I feel like Google has this a bit backwards. As always, I like to turn the metaphor on it’s head. You’re not visiting a website, you’re inviting a website. You’re allowing the website to use your system resources, bandwidth, CPU cycles, etc. And what you do with your own system is none of the websites business. They can protect their business model on the server side, if they need to. But maybe they just need better business models.

    • Sanctus
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      2111 months ago

      Boosting because this is how we should see websites. You dont visit them you download them. Websites are vampires that must be invited inside to use your system’s resources to do whatever it does.

  • quortez
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    3311 months ago

    Just what the web needed, SafetyNet in your browser. Does anyone have the EFF on speed dial?

  • SokathHisEyesOpen
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    2311 months ago

    Google is fucking evil, and they even admitted it when they changed their motto from Don’t Be Evil.

  • @mustyOrange@beehaw.org
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    1111 months ago

    The concept of having third party “trusted” attesters just screams abuse, corruption, and data selling. What would their business model be? Direct payments from browser companies? Selling “anonymized” data? What if their data security is crap it just ends up being another vector by which leaks and scams can happen? I doubt the average web user is going to understand that all of their data is going to be going thru some man in the middle when they Google something

    What about competition? What if attester A has major ties with Microsoft edge and decide to block Firefox users? Or what about smaller third party apps that are made for accessibility reasons? Or hell - what about startups that are trying to enter the market?

    The only reason these attesters would be trusted is because the large companies say they are. Theyd be completely at the whims of Google and Microsoft. What a stupid fucking idea with little upside for the end user

      • @gapbetweenus@feddit.de
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        1011 months ago

        Never had any issues with speed of any browser, so I don’t really get that - bloated mostly in the the sense of UI. But it’s also been I think some years since I tried, maybe it’s time to try it out again.

        • @CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlOPM
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          811 months ago

          Bloated is a weird nebulous term. Chrome is bloated because of telemetry. Bloat generally means things in the software that are not needy.

          I think clunky is the term you’re looking for. I cannot think of what it has in the UI that isn’t needed.

          • @gapbetweenus@feddit.de
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            611 months ago

            It’s a complete subjective feeling, I switched to chrome because it felt lighter and was easier to synch over several devices. Just checked FF out and it looks very different to the last time I saw it, so I will try it.

            • @CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlOPM
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              11 months ago

              Good luck. Credit to you for trying again :). There is FF sync where you can sync between devices easier also.

            • pjhenry1216
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              211 months ago

              If you haven’t tried in recent years, I’d suggest doing it again. Just as chrome has significantly increased in size and resource usage from its days of advertising how quick and light it is (it didn’t stop advertising those points for no reason), Firefox has improved dramatically. I forget what post I was on but someone said there’s always someone who badmouths Firefox simply because they haven’t tried it recently. It really is true. Tech evolves so quickly these days, there’s no reason to not give it a shot again.

        • @pedro@lemm.ee
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          311 months ago

          Wans’t there a huge speed difference on the Google websites with Firefox at some point? I’ve always used Firefox and will never go to chrome but damn YouTube/maps/… feel slow on Firefox

          I’m sure it’s not intentional /s

      • Virkkunen
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        11 months ago

        On synthetic tests on Windows 10/11, sure, but on real world usage it’s quite clear the Firefox is on the slow end of the stick, on Windows, Mac, Linux and specially Android

    • I felt similarly until I reinstalled Firefox a few months back because of this. It’s actually gotten a lot better imo. I won’t be going back to Chrome in any case.

    • @SirElliott@beehaw.org
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      511 months ago

      I personally like LibreWolf , a privacy-focused version of Firefox that has Ublock Origin installed by default and has unnecessary things like Mozilla Pocket removed.

      Another option is Ungoogled Chromium, which is just Google Chromium with Google web services removed.

  • @AVeryCleverName
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    811 months ago

    Who has read The Master Switch by Tim Wu? It’s a great book and that essentially argues every mass communication medium started off as a decentralized playground for hobbyists before consolidating into a centralized profit seeking (or profit-seeking-enabling) entity. It the ends with the question of whether the same destiny awaits the internet.

    I remember hoping it didn’t, and that hope grows harder to maintain by the day. It’s so fucking sad.

    I just hope that even if this standard is implemented, the protocol maintains enough of it’s flexibility for small enclaves of people who still believe in the technology’s original vision to “opt out” of it.

  • @deCorp0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    811 months ago

    I use Firefox and LibreWolf trying to avoid Chrome based browsers, but doesn’t Mozilla get the majority of the funding for Firefox development from making Google default search? I’ve purchased a few of Firefox’s paid features, VPN, etc hoping that it would contribute to getting them a new business model.

    • @CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlOPM
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      711 months ago

      You’re doing a great job and if more did what you did, they wouldn’t have to rely on search revenues. They know most users switch search engines. Those defaults are what fund browser development. Firefox are not in the search engine market, and if they took that sacrifice, they’d go bust and wouldn’t be in the browser market either. It sucks, and it isn’t glamorous, but it is the only way they can financially compete in the browser market at all. Browsers are complex and millions of lines of code and only getting more complex. It is far from cheap.

    • pjhenry1216
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      2211 months ago

      Doesn’t help for things like YouTube ads or the like where the ads are delivered from the same domain. Also the attester may not validate your environment as safe. I didn’t do s deep deep dive into what may be part of the attestation, but resolution of various domains (or ensuring they return some specific value) could easily make it’s way in if they wanted.

      • @lntl@lemmy.sdf.org
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        211 months ago

        This is speculation. DNS is a tool enterprise uses to manage networks. It’s unlikely that Google will upend this so ads can be watched.

        There’s a risk that IT departments nationwide would just deploy Edge or Firefox instead of Chrome to retain the ability to manage and secure networks. This is not what Google wants.

        • pjhenry1216
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          11 months ago

          They literally already do this with YouTube ads, what are you talking about? This is a thing that already happens.

          Edit: there are already sites I can’t visit due to work blocking some domains and those sites have the “disable your ad blocker” with no way to say no thanks. It isn’t google that will break it. It’ll be an attester and it’ll be the site that chooses that attester.

    • mohKohn
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      1411 months ago

      this is a social problem not a personal one. why are you proposing personal hacks already?

      • @lntl@lemmy.sdf.org
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        511 months ago

        You’re confused. DNS servers are the backbone of the internet, not a “hack.” Also, this isn’t a social problem. Poverty is a social problem.

    • @CrypticCoffee@lemmy.mlOPM
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      411 months ago

      Out of curiosity what would you recommend? I’m aware of PiHole, but many struggle to get hold of a pi. Any other good options?

      • @noli@programming.dev
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        611 months ago

        You can run pihole on any linux system, not sure how compatibility is with windows/macos. I used to just run it locally. It also has some speed benefits to run it on the same machine that consumes it

      • pjhenry1216
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        111 months ago

        With a little work involving Wireguard, you could setup a pihole on DigitalOcean for between $6-$7 ($4-$5 if you use their cheapest server, but I want to tinker a bit so wanted just a tad more power) a month. It’s split tunnel configuration, so it only handles DNS. Essentially, no matter where I go, I can connect to the pihole and get its functionality. I get it on my phone no matter I’m on wifi or cell network. If something is blocked that I need real quick, I don’t even need to configure the pihole, just disconnect from Wireguard temporarily. So, it’ll run you the cost of the suggested retail cost of a pi4 and accessories basically each year.

  • @artaxthehappyhorse@lemmy.ml
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    511 months ago

    Use DRM to encrypt site content. Use DMCA anti circumvention clauses to make ad blocking effectively illegal. Turn everyone into your little b-tch sheep and expose them to unskippable totally irrelevant ads over and over. Execs and shareholders profit.