Ublock Origin blocked in Chrome

Diggs

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Chrome is now blocking uBlock Origin. I don't use Chrome very much but our customers do. I see YouTube starting to block it also where before it was never an issue.

@add - Hmmm..... uBlock Origin Lite seems to be the replacement and is compliant (MV3?).
 
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I don't use Chrome very much but our customers do.

And those same customers are going to face the choice between the most robust ad-blocking that can be had and Google Chrome browser. That, or use the Lite version of uBlock Origin.

I truly don't get the clinging to Chrome, and mostly because there are so many Chromium-based browsers out there. Moving from one to another is pretty darned painless.
 
I truly don't get the clinging to Chrome,
Really? Clean, fast, with best search results. Doesn't overtly throw it's tracking in your face like Edge and others do. Doesn't require a registered account. Support from others is quick and available. Easy to see why it's preferred by most. I use and contribute to Mozilla but still have Chrome on all my machines.
 
@Diggs,

The fact that it doesn't "overtly throw its tracking in your face" is one of the most utterly insidious `features` of Chrome. It is one of the very worst data miners out there, and that's by design.

I use Edge, Brave, & Vivaldi. None of these require a registered account (try Edge under a local account) unless you choose to use sync features, and the same is true of Chrome if you want to use the sync features.

I find moving among the Chromium-based browsers almost seamless, with the exception of Edge, and that's only because Microsoft refused to give up its "Favorites" nomenclature in favor of Bookmarks, and I can personally manage that slight difference just fine.

I use Gmail, and have for decades, and am an Android user, so I can't honestly be called anti-Google in any meaningful sense. But what they collect via Chrome offends me, particularly when other virtually identical browsers (from the user perspective) are available that don't.
 
@Diggs,

The fact that it doesn't "overtly throw its tracking in your face" is one of the most utterly insidious `features` of Chrome. It is one of the very worst data miners out there, and that's by design.

I use Edge, Brave, & Vivaldi. None of these require a registered account (try Edge under a local account) unless you choose to use sync features, and the same is true of Chrome if you want to use the sync features.

I find moving among the Chromium-based browsers almost seamless, with the exception of Edge, and that's only because Microsoft refused to give up its "Favorites" nomenclature in favor of Bookmarks, and I can personally manage that slight difference just fine.

I use Gmail, and have for decades, and am an Android user, so I can't honestly be called anti-Google in any meaningful sense. But what they collect via Chrome offends me, particularly when other virtually identical browsers (from the user perspective) are available that don't.
In this forum you are preaching to the choir. The people using Chrome are not in this choir and the only other option they know of is Edge.
 
The people using Chrome are not in this choir and the only other option they know of is Edge.

And isn't part of our role to educate them that other options exist? I consider that one of my primary roles.

End users who are sophisticated enough to be using uBlock Origin and upset about the changes in Chrome which cause it to be blocked are prime candidates for browser transition. They had to download Chrome to install it, so that's not a barrier.

If you like a Chromium-based browser, be it Chrome or something else, your other options are endless should you find yourself in a situation where you'd want one. Letting people know this, and giving suggestions, is something we should be doing.
 
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The fact that it doesn't "overtly throw its tracking in your face" is one of the most utterly insidious `features` of Chrome. It is one of the very worst data miners out there, and that's by design.
This ^^
I will never use or recommend Chrome to anyone, ever.

@Diggs Steve Gibson's "Security Now!" Podcast where he discusses this topic at length.


Post number #33

Link to the Video

https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-995-Notes.pdf Page 12 of 20 (Thanks @britechguy )
 
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