NetOpWibby 44 minutes ago

I just set Helium as my default browser yesterday after dual-wielding it with Arc. Never thought I'd move on from Arc but here we are.

willtemperley 2 hours ago

In the same sense that a blockchain can be forked by using software that only accepts certain types of block, is it possible to fork the WWW in a similar manner? e.g. with changes that neuter the ad-mongers.

For example coming up with a way to get rid of these god awful cookies. Maybe ad-monger sites could be allowed in the same way an insecure connection is allowed behind a series of warnings?

  • vitally3643 1 hour ago

    The internet is literally just a pipe. There's no limitation binding us to HTTP. You can use any protocol you want over the internet, anything at all.

    • willtemperley 1 hour ago

      Well quite. So why are we living in this surveillance hellscape?

    • bastawhiz 1 hour ago

      Not sure I'd call it just a pipe, but maybe a series of tubes.

pogue 2 hours ago

How are they going to be adding uBlock Origin to Chromium going forward if manifest v2 gets completely deprecated/removed entirely?

  • gruez 2 hours ago

    AFAIK some of the other chromium forks (brave and/or edge?) were committed to backporting manifest v2 (or more specifically the webRequestBlocking API) for future chromium versions.

    • bjord 1 hour ago

      this is not correct. neither brave nor edge has committed to that.

      as of yet, there's no (publicly stated) contingency plan if the upstream mv2 code is excised, but I could be mistaken.

  • feverzsj 2 hours ago

    Nothing. It will be a huge burden for them to maintain all the removed code. Their only choice is to integrate brave's adblocker.

    • pogue 1 hour ago

      This seems to be the only way forward from what I can figure. Helium's main selling point is that it's essentially degoogled chromium + a few miscellaneous patches & full uBlock. But once Google completely strips all that out of Chromium project, that won't be a tenable option.

      I'm not sure what Opera/Vivaldi/et al. use for their native adblocking, but Brave's rust adblocker makes the most sense to me. Really it's uBlock's filtering lists that keep the whole thing working anyway.

mrbluecoat 2 hours ago

> cause havoc, and put people first

An odd pairing

  • willtemperley 2 hours ago

    Not really. Every activist that made a real difference for the good caused some kind of havoc.

  • tancop 1 hour ago

    if you follow wukko on twitter you know it makes sense. its the same guy who made cobalt the video downloader.