Is the database of websites installed locally in the extension or is it calling home for every website I visit?
Is the database of websites installed locally in the extension or is it calling home for every website I visit?
Let’s not build anything because there are no users. There are no users if we don’t build anything.
It works on Android, but I don’t believe it works on iOS.
I understand we have all the proof now, but back then, how can someone get intimidated by a call that could easily be fake.
Fair enough, but a decent actor could probably work as well.
How did he prove he was actually himself? Seems like anyone could have done it with a bit of AI.
Duckduckgo’s version is so much better. Unlimited aliases for free.
It’s a trade-off, because they often also want their entire article to be crawled by Google.
For that they use iframes, which have a different security system.
Because of the CORS settings on Google’s servers would tell your browser to not go forward with the request. There are two ways it could eventually be possible:
Fair enough, that’s interesting. I assume this only applies to the non-web clients. On the web, it would not be possible. You can verify by looking at the outgoing network requests on this random video for example: https://invidious.privacyredirect.com/watch?v=qKMcKQCQxxI
I’m pretty confident that you are wrong.
Invidious and YouTube piped (and LibreTube) by default load the videos server-side, as opposed to GrayJay, NewPipe or Smarttube.
It has advantages (mostly that your IP address is not shared with YouTube, and it allows users from countries where YouTube is blocked to still access it) and inconvenients (much harder to keep up when YouTube actively seeks to block them).
Smarttube next doesn’t require rooting the device, it can be sideloaded. Sideloading is not very complicated. Google is not trying to block any sideloading (at the moment, at least).
LibreTube is also a good one. Basically an app for piped
Turtoises are turtles ya dingbat
https://www.britannica.com/story/whats-the-difference-between-a-turtle-and-a-tortoise
Browsers based on chromium do not have to follow exactly what the main branch is doing. If they want to keep supporting MV2 or support different rules for MV3, they can. Albeit it’s a bit cumbersome.
Unfortunately, I think that while ad blockers won’t work as well, they will still work good enough that most won’t bother making the switch.
https://blog.getadblock.com/how-adblock-is-getting-ready-for-manifest-v3-6cf21a7884f6
https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBOL-home/wiki/
https://adguard.com/en/blog/adguard-mv3.html
https://www.reddit.com/r/uBlockOrigin/comments/1067als/comment/j3h00xj/
The main issue I see is the slow update of filters (which require an extension update). This might make YouTube win the cat and mouse game. Where YouTube updates(ed?) their blocking detection multiple time a day.
I think maybe whatever client you use could build this functionality.