Chrome's Manifest V3 transition is here. First up are warnings for any V2 extensions.
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There's a reason I put in a Raspberry Pi for Pihole while I look at what I should do for an alternate browser.Next up, they'll be shutting down their pop-up blocker.
So, like, 2 weeks later?Yes, that was my thought as well. Keep your current version, which supports V2 extensions, indefinitely, until some catastrophic security flaw is found and it is no longer wise to use it.
OR...hear me out...you could just use Firefox and not worry about it. You can import all your Chrome stuff into Firefox in seconds.Yes, that was my thought as well. Keep your current version, which supports V2 extensions, indefinitely, until some catastrophic security flaw is found and it is no longer wise to use it.
Quick search and it seems there are multiple methods to prevent future Chrome updates. I might implement those today, since the article says the bad version starts getting automatically installed next week.
Man I remember when Google was supposedly the good guys.
Least I have options to not use it![]()
They knew what would happen but steered Google into being an advertising platform anyways."It is clear that a search engine which was taking money for showing cellular phone ads would have difficulty justifying the page that our system returned to its paying advertisers. For this type of reason and historical experience with other media [Bagdikian 83], we expect that advertising funded search engines will be inherently biased towards the advertisers and away from the needs of the consumers."
Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page in Google's original paper "The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine"
I wonder how long it'll be before Google ad services/analytics, which are embedded in virtually the entire internet for site metrics, will require this? Imagine, all of your webpages you go to that use Google analytics will suddenly throw some unlockable overlay that your browser is unsupported because it still supports manifest v2 (even if it supports v3 too).
I'm not a multibillion dollar company abusing my monopoly power to control the internet.Talking about hurting business while complaining you can’t block ads anymore is rich.
Glad that after moving from Netscape to Firefox I never moved to anything else. Tried a lot of browsers but FF has always been the primary browser.Glad I've mostly transitioned to Firefox at this point...
I was always bothered that they made some inroads into education. Anyone with IT experience would have known the data mining that they were setting up their students for. The decision making people at the schools or school distracts must have come away with fat wallets.One big problem is schools were Chromebooks are used. There is no manageable way to provision the Chromebooks with Firefox instead.
I (and many of our students) will sorely miss uBlock Origin.
Firefox did go through a significant re-engineering process a while back, and the result has been a lot more performant. I think you'll be pleasantly surprised.Twice in the past I switched to Firefox, but the performance was so low I had to switch back. I routinely have dozens of windows open, and hundreds of tabs. I actually wish I didn’t work that way, but it seems to be what happens, for many years now. I guess I could transfer over to Firefox again and see if performance is now comparable to Chrome. I do find the bookmarks manager to be massively better in Firefox!
I've been FF main since the beta. I was there during the Netscape die-out and the IE6 supremacy, and I refuse to use a browser that's trying to bring back those bad days.
I have left tech (and the workforce) due to a number of factors, so I haven’t needed profile support, so I have no idea if things have improved, but one possible solution is that you could simply use firefox for your default profile and use chrome for the other stuff. either that or use a fork.I looked at Firefox awhile back when the V3 switch was announced. One thing that I disliked about Firefox is the clunky profile management. It's pretty easy to switch and maintain in Chrome but I wasn't able to find a similar UI/UX in Firefox. There was an extension to help profile switching but that stopped working after a Firefox update. Hopefully Firefox beefs up it's profile UX in future updates.
Don't do Brave. They're full of scummy practices themselves. Things like modifying pages to redirect advertising/referral revenue to themselves instead of page owners, cryptocurrency shenanigans, etc.I've been lazy about switching off of Chrome ever since switching to Chrome long ago when it was "fast and lightweight." I tried the "new and improved" Edge, but it stinks and slapping AI on everything is annoying as hell. To me, anyway. It does not feel like a "value add" at all. The reason I use uBlock is, in part, for reasons like malvertising. Breaking my uBlock sounds less secure to me. What is good these days and allows uBlock to function fully? Opera? Mozilla? Brave is an option, I suppose.
Firefox has been declining for years but this move by Google might be just the thing to kick off a renaissance of Firefox use. I hope anyhow.it's a really good thing Firefox has that handy "import from chrome" feature. Quit using Chrome some time ago and really only use it at work because that's what the company intranet works best with; i'm all on firefox/firefox mobile, now.
Those chrome-only interfaces are becoming increasingly rare, they often work fine in Firefox, Safari, etc. anyway..... and MS Edge is now just Chrome under the hood, plus MS's incompetent & killable tracking shit, and minus Google's scarily competent & unkillable tracking shit. I've yet to find a "This interface requires Google Chrome" prompt that doesn't go away when opened in Edge.beyond me why people use chrome as their primary browser. you have to have it, for sure, for those chrome-only interfaces, but as a daily driver? do not get it, but i think there is some sort of compulsion to deliver data to google involved.
For years I've found Firefox to be far more performant than Chrome. I have dozens of tabs open in multiple tab groups on Firefox - no issues. I switched over 4 or 5 years ago at this point and have almost no issues.Twice in the past I switched to Firefox, but the performance was so low I had to switch back. I routinely have dozens of windows open, and hundreds of tabs. I actually wish I didn’t work that way, but it seems to be what happens, for many years now. I guess I could transfer over to Firefox again and see if performance is now comparable to Chrome. I do find the bookmarks manager to be massively better in Firefox!
Moving from a browser controlled by an advertising company to one controlled by a crypto/ad company is not a brave move, it's a stupid one:That is a Brave move.
- They are removing advertisements from your website
- They are replacing them with their own advertisements
- You then need to sign up and claim money in the form of a shitty cryptocurrency token