Chant it with me, friends!
Stop 👏 using 👏 Chrome 👏!!
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I use Firefox btw
Which browser do you use though?
In addition to what was already said - use Firefox instead of anything chromium-based - I think it’s equally important to stop using the services offered by big tech companies and not just try to keep using them on our terms. Google wants me to watch a ton of ads on YouTube? Fine, I’ll stop watching it. In fairness, on my smart TV, YouTube ads have been what I consider adequate, while Twitch can be a disaster. The alternatives already exist with Peertube and Owncast. Are they perfect yet? Far from it probably but there won’t be big improvements if nobody uses it.
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I’m waiting to see Youtube block me using Vivaldi w/uBlock Origin on Linux so far. It hasn’t happened, am I accidentally doing something awesome to evade their traps so far?
Vivaldi’s Chrome-based, so I would presume the same tricks to detect uBlock Origin on Chrome itself would work, or is Vivaldi doing something sneaky?
I have no problem jumping to Firefox the moment they do it – I just haven’t had an issue yet. I should add I’m in Canada, perhaps that is a factor.
It hasn’t happened, am I accidentally doing something awesome to evade their traps so far?
Probably A/B testing.
I’m using Adblock Plus on Edge and have the same experience like you. No reaction from Youtube yet to my adblocker.
In-built adblockers aren’t going to be affected by MV3 anyway. They are not extensions, thus Google is powerless there.
That’s cool, but YouTube detects Vivaldi’s built in adblocker, so it’s kinda irrelevant if it’s affected by extension policies.
To use YT in Vivaldi, you have to properly configure uBlock Origin (avoid extra filters that interfere with YT) and disable the builtin adblock for YT. And given that Vivaldi relies on Chrome Extension Store for its extensions, there will still be some friction to getting Mv2 extensions after Google pulls the plug on them.
OP has literally said that YT didn’t block them/didnt show any ads while using Vivaldi… As far I’m concerned, I couldn’t care less. I don’t use YT at all.
Vivaldi user here. So far, I’ve had zero problems accessing YouTube.
Yeah, OP literally said that they weren’t blocked when using Vivaldi with uBlock Origin, you were the first one to mention the builtin adblock (which is detected by YouTube).
Again: to use YT, you have to disable the builtin adblock and use only uBO. That’s in line with OPs statement.
Oh I hadn’t thought of how I’d installed Vivaldi. I always just choose the basic install – no Vivaldi mail, ad-block, etc. Just their core browser. Then I install uBlock Origin on top of that. And, so far, I’ve never hit the new Youtube adblock-block.
Firefox with uBlock Origin on Windows. Nothing so far.
I guess they only want to fuck their own customers so far?
Switching to Firefox is really not needed at all to evade this one. Just switch to a different Chromium browser than Chrome itself, then use your browser’s own extension store.
I use Edge, my adblocker is in Edge’s extension store. If Google is throttling updates to my adblocker to help in their fight on adblockers, I can just install the one from the Edge Addons store and that problem is solved. I’m sure other Chromium browsers have their own extension store too.
Why do you expect that Edge wouldn’t adopt Google-like MV3 along with Chrome?
Microsoft adopted Chromium in order to minimise development costs in a product it doesn’t see as core, something which would be incurred if it had to maintain its own fork of mv3, and is incentivized through Bing to pursue a similar approach.
I’m talking about what’s in the title only, Google slowing down extension updates.
There’s no problem with MV3. My adblocker already claims the user experience won’t be impacted.
The main issue is that block list updates will have to be delivered via extension updates, which means the extension store provider is in control of how fast the block lists can be updated. So adblockers trying to keep up with Youtube might get slowed down by Google.
My point is that can easily be solved by just not using Google’s extension store. Microsoft has no reason to slow down Youtube adblocking updates for example.Of course, Microsoft still discontinues MV2 too. But that’s not my problem at all, and also not the one in the title here.
using a chromium based browser is still supporting google’s chromium monopoly
??? I didn’t suggest it would, that’s an entirely different topic.
Do I need to read the article, is it actually about something completely different than the headline says? Because that’s what I was talking about, the headline, since I’ve seen that argument before.
When in a discussion about an article, it’s usually a good idea to read the article since it may make or address the points that you want to discuss. The headline (in this case) is just the conclusion and you’re missing all the supporting evidence that leads there. Taking just headlines and assuming the context leads to being misinformed and spreading misinformation.
my adblocker is in Edge’s extension store. If Google is throttling updates to my adblocker
For instance, you are assuming that this is related to Google maliciously throttling extension updates which is not true.
YouTube is pushing new ad-block circumvention approximately daily.
Microsoft’s documentation states that extension updates can take up to 7 days to pass certification and go live.
That is not materially different than Google’s behaviour in this context.
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Click here to see the summary
YouTube can instantly switch up its ad delivery system, but once Manifest V3 becomes mandatory, that won’t be true for extension developers.
If ad blocking is a cat-and-mouse game of updates and counter-updates, then Google will force the mouse to slow down.
The current platform, Manifest V2, has been around for over ten years and works just fine, but it’s also quite powerful and allows extensions to have full filtering control over the traffic your web browser sees.
Engadget’s Anthony Ha interviewed some developers in the filtering extension community, and they described a constant cat-and-mouse game with YouTube.
Firefox’s Manifest V3 implementation doesn’t come with the filtering limitations, and parent company Mozilla promises that users can “rest assured that in spite of these changes to Chrome’s new extensions architecture, Firefox’s implementation of Manifest V3 ensures users can access the most effective privacy tools available like uBlock Origin and other content-blocking and privacy-preserving extensions.”
Google claims that Manifest V3 will improve browser “privacy, security, and performance,” but every comment we can find from groups that aren’t giant ad companies disputes this description.
Saved 80% of original text.
I don’t know so much about this, but it’s funny to see all this while Apple lets me set an ad blocker in iOS settings.
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Oh no…