Google

User avatar
RTH10260
Posts: 14683
Joined: Mon Feb 22, 2021 10:16 am
Location: Switzerland, near the Alps
Verified: ✔️ Eurobot

Google

#26

Post by RTH10260 »

Looks like this has kicked in, AdBlockOne has been disabled
Chrome pushes forward with plans to limit ad blockers in the future

Posted: November 23, 2023
by Pieter Arntz

Google has announced it will shut down Manifest V2 in June 2024 and move on to Manifest V3, the latest version of its Chrome extension specification that has faced criticism for putting limits on ad blockers. Roughly said, Manifest V2 and V3 are the rules that browser extension developers have to follow if they want their extensions to get accepted into the Google Play Store.

Manifest V2 is the old model. The Chrome Web Store no longer accepts Manifest V2 extensions, but browsers can still use them. For now. Manifest V3 is supported generally in Chrome 88 or later and will be the standard after the transition planned to take place in June 2024.

A popular type of browser extensions are ad blockers. Almost all these ad blockers work with block lists, which are long lists of domains, subdomains, and IP addresses that they filter out of your web traffic. These lists are commonly referred to as rulesets. One part of the transition will “improve” content filtering. And to be fair, Google has made some compromises when it comes to the version as it’s now in the planning, compared to what it originally planned to do.



https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/news/ ... the-future
User avatar
AndyinPA
Posts: 9996
Joined: Mon Feb 22, 2021 10:42 am
Location: Pittsburgh
Verified:

Google

#27

Post by AndyinPA »

Don't think I'd spend much time on a computer without one.
"Choose your leaders with wisdom and forethought. To be led by a coward is to be controlled by all that the coward fears… To be led by a liar is to ask to be told lies." -Octavia E. Butler
User avatar
keith
Posts: 3767
Joined: Mon Feb 22, 2021 10:23 pm
Location: The Swamp in Victorian Oz
Occupation: Retired Computer Systems Analyst Project Manager Super Coder
Verified: ✅lunatic

Google

#28

Post by keith »

Not a big fan of Chrome, but I do use it on mobile.

I have been getting friendlier with Edge lately, but I am getting sick to bloody death of every time I do a search, decide I used lousy search terms, and go back to the top to refine them, it scrolls past the search entry point and puts up a 'Copilot' thing-a-mee. I hate it and I don't want it. Its worse than M$oft's old 'Clippie' thing-a-ma-jig.

When I ask Copilot 'how do I turn off Copilot' it responds "No, I won't do that. FOAD".

I might have to go back to Firefox full time, but I understand that Mozilla is using Chrome rendering engine too. At least so far I haven't had a problem with the Firefox equivalent to CoPilot whatever its called. If Firefox has to block Adblock too, then I might have to resort to something exotic like Brave or Opera - but I don't know anything about their rendering engine.
Edit: ETA: I figured out how to turn off CoPilot. Instructions here: https://www.tomsguide.com/computing/sof ... windows-11

(Theoretically. I haven't actually proved it yet)
Has everybody heard about the bird?
User avatar
RTH10260
Posts: 14683
Joined: Mon Feb 22, 2021 10:16 am
Location: Switzerland, near the Alps
Verified: ✔️ Eurobot

Google

#29

Post by RTH10260 »

Google Is Ordered To Identify Who Watched Certain YouTube Videos
A massively overreaching and broad order.

Didi Rankovic
March 26, 2024

US federal law enforcement and courts have gone a step further in the extreme efforts they are making to surveil people’s activities online, including on Google’s vast platforms.

The latest is that the tech giant gets orders to identify all people who happen to be watching certain videos or livestreams on YouTube.

After directly censoring creators and channels, giving geolocation data of its users to the authorities in response to the controversial geofencing warrants, this is a new example of how Google can be used and abused in dragnet-style “investigations.”

Unmasking everyone who watched a particular video is similar to geofencing in that it makes everyone a suspect – and this, a number of experts and rights groups believe, is unconstitutional, i.e., in violation of the 4th Amendment, that protects from unreasonable searches.

Forbes writes that it has had access to several orders that name certain YouTube videos, citing one unsealed case originating in Kentucky and having to do with people viewing content posted by a user who law enforcement suspects of money laundering for selling bitcoin for cash.

Undercover agents had contacted the user, sending links to drone mapping and AR tutorials, to next turn to Google, asking to be told who watched the videos.

The videos had more than 30,000 views, and a court ordered that any user who did, between January 1 and 8, 2003, must be thoroughly unmasked.

The order wanted names, addresses, phone numbers, and account activity of each Google user, and IP addresses of everyone who watched the videos without an account.

“It’s fair to expect that law enforcement won’t have access to that (sensitive personal) information without probable cause,” commented Electronic Privacy Information Center’s John Davisson. “This order turns that assumption on its head.”

When the police asked for the order to be issued, they stated, “There is reason to believe that these records would be relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation.”

Although Google complied with the demand to keep silent about all this until the records were unsealed last week, according to Forbes, they “do not show whether or not Google provided data in the case.”

A separate case in New Hampshire concerned a bomb threat in a public place, and people watching a livestream of the police searching the area. The livestream was possible thanks to a camera on nearby business premises.

Next, the police wanted to know exactly who watched it, including on a YouTube channel belonging to Boston and Maine Live, which has 130,000 subscribers.

Again, no word if Google delivered.



https://reclaimthenet.org/google-is-ord ... ube-videos
User avatar
RTH10260
Posts: 14683
Joined: Mon Feb 22, 2021 10:16 am
Location: Switzerland, near the Alps
Verified: ✔️ Eurobot

Google

#30

Post by RTH10260 »

RTH10260 wrote: Fri Mar 29, 2024 6:21 pm
Google Is Ordered To Identify Who Watched Certain YouTube Videos
A massively overreaching and broad order.

Didi Rankovic
March 26, 2024

:snippity:
https://reclaimthenet.org/google-is-ord ... ube-videos
this video has more details:
LAWYER: Cops Are Using YouTube Videos as Bait!

Andrew Flusche Attorney at Law
16 Apr 2024

Should you get arrested because of what the YouTube algorithm puts in front of you? Of course not! The cops have used YouTube videos as bait, and this is obviously a violation of our 4th amendment rights.

User avatar
raison de arizona
Posts: 18195
Joined: Mon Feb 22, 2021 10:21 am
Location: Nothing, Arizona
Occupation: bit twiddler
Verified: ✔️ he/him/his

Google

#31

Post by raison de arizona »

Google Workers Protest Cloud Contract With Israel's Government
Google employees are staging sit-ins and protests at company offices in New York and California over “Project Nimbus,” a cloud contract with Israel's government, as the country's war with Hamas continues.

Dozens of Google employees began occupying company offices in New York City and Sunnyvale, California, on Tuesday in protest of the company’s $1.2 billion contract providing cloud computing services to the Israeli government.

The sit-in, organized by the activist group No Tech for Apartheid, is happening at Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian’s office in Sunnyvale and the 10th floor commons of Google’s New York office. The sit-in will be accompanied by outdoor protests at Google offices in New York, Sunnyvale, San Francisco, and Seattle beginning at 2 pm ET and 11 am PT.

Tuesday’s actions mark an escalation in a series of recent protests organized by tech workers who oppose their employer’s relationship with the Israeli government, especially in light of Israel’s ongoing assault on Gaza. Since Hamas killed about 1,100 Israelis on October 7, the IDF has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians.

Just over a dozen people gathered outside Google’s offices in New York and Sunnyvale on Tuesday. Among those in New York was Google cloud software engineer Eddie Hatfield, who was fired days after disrupting Google Israel’s managing director at March’s Mind The Tech, a company-sponsored conference focused on the Israeli tech industry, in early March. Several hours into the sit-ins on Tuesday, Google security began to accuse the workers of “trespassing” and disrupting work, prompting several people to leave while others vowed to remain until they were forced out.

The 2021 contract, known as Project Nimbus, involves Google and Amazon jointly providing cloud computing infrastructure and services across branches of the Israeli government. Last week, Time reported that Google’s work on Project Nimbus involves providing direct services to the Israel Defense Forces. No Tech for Apartheid is a coalition of tech workers and organizers with MPower Change and Jewish Voice for Peace, which are respectively Muslim- and Jewish-led peace-focused activist organizations. The coalition came together shortly after Project Nimbus was signed and its details became public in 2021.

No Tech for Apartheid also published an open letter cosigned by 18 other organizations that demands Google and Amazon immediately cancel their work on Project Nimbus. At the time of writing, it has gathered more than 93,000 signatures from the general public. In addition to Project Nimbus, the letter cited recent reports that the IDF has used Google Photos to identify and detain Palestinians en masse in the West Bank.
:snippity:
https://www.wired.com/story/google-no-t ... a-protest/
“Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide.” —John Adams
Post Reply

Return to “Economy”