this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 years ago (9 children)

Using the proposed “Web Environment Integrity” means websites can select on which devices (browsers) they wish to be displayed, and can refuse service to other devices. It binds client side software to a website, creating a silo’d app. Web Environment Integrity on GitHub This penalizes platforms on which the preferred client side software is not available.

From Young-Lord/fight-for-the-open-web.

This will also affect all the Chromium based clients (Chrome, obviously, Brave, Vivaldi...)

USE FIREFOX(Librewolf), PEOPLE. SUPPORT THE OPENWEB

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (8 children)

The thought here is that, a website could be programmed to, for example, only be accessible to users of chrome (or even an android device), correct? Other than google itself, why would any website want to do such a thing? Is the idea that google is trying to bring users to chrome, by blocking google services on other browsers? That could be really transformative for the web, because then you'd have microsoft doing the same thing with edge, apple doing the same thing with safari, other companies like fb or whatever launching their own bespoke 'browsers' to access their services. Will users actually put up with the degree of fragmentation that this move might bring? Won't it just push users to the 'old internet' where you can simply go to a website and interact with it?

Sorry, I'm kind of talking out loud here trying to wrap my head around this. I see people grousing about DRM and ads, and I'm struggling to connect all the dots.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Other than google itself, why would any website want to do such a thing

Web devs can be pretty lazy and only want to support Chrome anyway. If Chrome is the only browser offering certain features ("proof" that user is human, potentially getting rid of adblockers altogether, etc), that's a good excuse to finally just stop supporting Firefox and Safari.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago

Didn't Microsoft try and do this with Silverlight back in the day?

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