Google's proposal pivots on a key premise: enhancing trust in the client environment. It introduces a new API that allows websites to request a token, providing evidence about the client code's environment.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User-Agent_header
If this involves a 3rd-party somehow, all we're doing is rolling back the web twenty-five years, where every website demanded some damn plugin for even basic functionality. It's Realplayer, Flash, and JVM all over again.
Thank you for including an article, instead of just a longass "hey guys it's firstnamebunchanumbers - be sure to like and subscribe and hammer that bell!" video.Thats Luis Rossmann, who runs a successful computer repair shop in NYC and is probably the leading voice in right to repair and calling out corporate bullshit.p when it comes to right to repair and tech.
FireFox ftw
<script>
tag and expecting it to be a magic money button.
There's a dead-simple way to make unblockable ads - sell ads , instead of plopping down aYou're scaring us, man. Please don't encourage them.<script>
tag and expecting it to be a magic money button.
https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/a/user_image/6/9/0/AAEhCpAAEruq.jpg
Did your adblocker block that?
That's all any given website needs to do, after being paid money to do it.
There's a dead-simple way to make unblockable ads - sell ads, instead of plopping down a
<script>
tag and expecting it to be a magic money button.
This requires developers to do work and that costs money that managers don't want to spend.