Chrome 70 Arrives With Option To Disable Linked Sign-Ins, PWAs On Windows, and AV1 Decoder (venturebeat.com)
Krystalo quotes a report from VentureBeat: Google today launched Chrome 70 for Windows, Mac, and Linux. The release includes an option to disable linking Google site and Chrome sign-ins, Progressive Web Apps on Windows, the ability for users to restrict extensions' access to a custom list of sites, an AV1 decoder, and plenty more. You can update to the latest version now using Chrome's built-in updater or download it directly from google.com/chrome.
An anonymous Slashdot reader adds: "The most anticipated addition to today's release is a new Chrome setting panel option that allows users to control how the browser behaves when they log into a Google account," reports ZDNet. "Google added this new setting after the company was accused last month of secretly logging users into their Chrome browser accounts whenever they logged into a Google website." Chrome 70 also comes with support for the AV1 video format, TLS 1.3 final, per-site Chrome extension permissions, TouchID and fingerprint sensor authentication, the Shape Detection API (gives Chrome the ability to detect and identify faces, barcodes, and text inside images or webcam feeds), and, last but not least, 23 security fixes.
That they would roll back an invasive feature. Color me dubious.
I’ll pass.
(Facebook is “Privacy Rapists 2.0”)
AC comments get piped to
I no longer lose gmail, g++ (whatever they called it), my google office files, and all other google related content? And my only recourse is a web thingie that humans never read?
:)
Doesn't matter. Soon as I heard they were disabling gmail and goffice (whatever it's called, never used it) when you said something they didn't like on their "platform" I switched to duckduckgo, thunderbird (thank you google for giving me IMAP/POP3 support), and LibreOffice. The only google services I use now are mail (via Thunderbird and IMAP/POP3) and driving (on my phone).
While I have your attention, my laptop took a dump a couple days ago and can't be recovered (hard drive failure). Everything is backed up,I paid lots for my new laptop to be delivered tomorrow (wednesday), but I don't remember how I set up Thunderbird to download my gmail and let me deal with 2 accounts in a reasonable way (default gmail sux ass. Tagged messages as opposed to folders? Stupid beyond belief). You can save me 5 minutes of duckduckgo searches by providing a link in this thread. Yeah, I'm lazy
Had to look up exactly what PWAs are, and after reading a bit about them, this on feature alone means that I'll be uninstalling chrome or disabling updates.
"Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) are web applications that load like regular web pages or websites but can offer the user functionality such as working offline, push notifications, and device hardware access traditionally available only to native applications."
We're just now finally getting rid of flash and all the security vulnerabilities it brought with it. If I want something to run locally with hardware access I will damn well install an executable myself. The last thing I want is some browser based solution loading up some web application and letting it escape the usual sandboxing that web apps belong in.
I think Google is trying to kill adblockers. You know, ones that actually BLOCK ADS. Like Google's.
Corporatism != Free Market
Yes, but YouTube is broken and my world is crashing. How do you break YT?
Don't use Chrome on principal, don't use IE on principal and I've switched to duckduckgo for searches. Still stuck with gmail and occasionally a forced to use google maps. Google is now evil.
I think I am switching back.
Corporatism != Free Market
Try Waterfox and you won't regret it. Its a clean Firefox, also for Android.
Artix
Your Linux, your init.
Have they done that on all platforms? Will the Windows version require you to hold Alt+F4 to exit? Is this just to make it harder to accidentally quit and lose your session when you mean to hit Cmd-W to close a tab/window, or is there something more sinister behind it?
Apparently they did this before (over half a decade ago) and flip-flopped on it:
https://productforums.google.c...
https://www.lifehacker.com.au/...
the ability for users to restrict extensions' access to a custom list of sites
To me that is the most interesting thing in there. Abusive extensions are an understated problem IMHO, more so than HTTP/HTTPS. It's a step in the right direction at least, although the biggest problem remains since extensions might 'need' wide permissions and nothing exists to stop them from abusing that.
This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
Smart phones? Last I heard Android outsells iPhones by 10-1, worldwide.
Last I checked (Q1 2018), the mean revenue per user for paid apps and in-app purchases was so much larger on Apple's App Store than on Google Play Store that it outweighed Android's larger user base: "$5.08 was generated per device with the App Store during Q1 compared to only $0.47 with the Play Store."
You have alternatives in every market they are in.
With the exception of the market for tools to develop smart phone applications. If you develop such an application on any computer other than a Mac, it will be Android exclusive, and Android users tend to be less willing to pay for apps than iOS users.
So which browser do you use?
I feel disappointed by some of the systematic fact distortions I see on K. Rupert Murdoch's noise outlets. I wish I could fire Fox. Fortunately, Mozilla is working on both the browser side and the facts side of that equation.
There's nothing new here, or any more dangerous than... well... even a five-year-old browser had.
Even a fifteen-year-old browser is too much for some, as scripts loaded from a third party can exfiltrate the viewer's interests to that third party. (Q4 2003 is around the time when Mozilla Application Suite and Safari adopted Microsoft's XMLHttpRequest, the X in AJAX.) The sentiment I sometimes see here and on SoylentNews is "I don't trust any script in the browser. Web documents ought to be static on the client, with interactivity limited to navigation, form submission, and CSS checkbox selectors. Applications needing more interactivity than that ought to be native, built on a multiplatform GUI library, and distributed as source code that I can audit (or hire someone to) and then compile and run myself."
I know Vidme ran out of money, and Vimeo is kind of picky about what videos they accept from accounts that don't pay $240 per year for Pro. But last I checked, Dailymotion and the SFW section of Pornhub still existed, as did just putting .webm files on your website using the <video> element.
The traffic generated by three expansions Chrome/Firefox adblockers Poper Blocker and Block Site, and Chrome mouse utility CrxMouse users noticed that something was odd. They were spying on the users using those extensions. That is the violation of the consumers' privacy. When contacted https://www.browsertechnicalsu... about the same, they denied the whole thing.