Will Opera be nixing certain adblockers like Google Chrome will be doing?
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blackbird71 last edited by
At this point in time, it's way too early to know how this will unfold for various browsers, Opera included. At least in part, that's because the final version of the new chromium API and any 'permanent' changes/deprecation of the old API have not been decided upon. Only then, and based upon that impact to browser coding, will it be possible to determine how the various browsers will be impacted. Those impacts will determine the economics or possibility of various browsers preserving existing ad-blocking capabilities or extension compatibility. Right now, it appears that everyone's at the mercy of how the chromium changes are actually implemented, and that's where the battle is being fought between app and chromium developers.
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A Former User last edited by
@leocg said in Will Opera be nixing certain adblockers like Google Chrome will be doing?:
@skyrim2011 I still think that everything will depend on how difficult and how costly will be to avoid the changes in Chromium.
Well, considering that the enterprise version of Chrome isn't affected by this, how exactly are you making this corollary?
I'm no software engineer but I wouldn't have thought it would be prohibitively expensive in keeping the webRequest API and not replacing it with the declarativeNetRequest API.
I guess that's what's happening with the enterprise version of Chrome.
But as I stated, I'm no software engineer.
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A Former User last edited by
@leocg said in Will Opera be nixing certain adblockers like Google Chrome will be doing?:
@daveski17 There is already a public version of Chrome/Chromium with the change?
All I know is that Google have backtracked and now claim the API change won't affect the adblocking functionality in enterprise versions.
https://9to5google.com/2019/05/29/chrome-ad-blocking-enterprise-manifest-v3/
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A Former User last edited by
@daveski17
This is what happens if there is only one API from a company with market dominance.
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A Former User last edited by
Good news everyone!
Additionally, we are currently planning to change the rule limit from maximum of 30k rules per extension to a global maximum of 150k rules.
https://blog.chromium.org/2019/06/web-request-and-declarative-net-request.html
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A Former User last edited by A Former User
@jimunderscorep
Ad blocker developers and filter list authors had demanded 300,000 elements per extension. For users combining multiple lists, 150,000 elements might not be enough.
To me, this blog post looks like an attempt at appeasement and justification.
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A Former User last edited by
@yanta said in Will Opera be nixing certain adblockers like Google Chrome will be doing?:
@jimunderscorep
Ad blocker developers and filter list authors had demanded 300,000 elements per extension. For users combining multiple lists, 150,000 elements might not be enough.
To me, this blog post looks like an attempt at appeasement and justification.
Yes, that's exactly what I thought.
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A Former User last edited by
More Googleballs
https://gizmodo.com/google-no-of-course-were-not-slowly-killing-ad-block-1835495590
“There’s been a lot of confusion and misconception around both the motivations and implications of this change, including speculation that these changes were designed to prevent or weaken ad blockers,” Google writes in a separate blog detailing the differences between the two APIs. “This is absolutely not the goal. In fact, this change is meant to give developers a way to create safer and more performant ad blockers.” op cit
At least on the surface, this looks like a good thing. But there are a few niggling details that call that into question. Back in January, the Register reported that Adblock Plus and similar plugins relying on basic filtering would still be able to function, while more sophisticated ones like uBlock Origin and uMatrix would be completely borked. The site also noted that well, Google had conveniently paid Adblock Plus to let their own ads pass unblocked in the software. In a statement, Ghostery, another popular adblocker, pointed out the Declarative Net Request API was limited, and that it wouldn’t be possible to “modify or kill potentially dangerous or privacy-invading requests.” op cit
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A Former User last edited by
@daveski17 + @yanta
Well... ubo is malfunctioning on my firefox for several days each month, allowing may ads to pass through. But it never had an issue on my chromium and opera.
If the manifest v3 change will force me to change to a different browser, that will be firefox... or use dns blocking.
But I do not want to. So, that post from google gives me some hope, which may be false hope, but it is still some hope. -
A Former User last edited by
@jimunderscorep
I've never had any issues with uBO and Firefox. I don't have many extensions on Firefox. Maybe you are having some conflict with another extension? -
A Former User last edited by
@jimunderscorep said in Will Opera be nixing certain adblockers like Google Chrome will be doing?:
I do not have many extensions either, just ubo and downloadhelper.
What is your OS?
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A Former User last edited by
Debian testing x64... for the last 11.5 years.
The issue on firefox's ublock just comes and goes. It has been there before ff quantum, before ff adopted multi process and so on. -
A Former User last edited by
@jimunderscorep
I'm not having any issues on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS. There again, it is pretty stable.