Back when Google had announced that it wanted to improve the messy state of Chrome extensions in October last year, a section of the plan seemed like it was going after ad blockers. However, in a new blog post, Google is clearing things out by saying that they don’t want to kill ad blockers. [caption id=“attachment_5954471” align=“alignnone” width=“1280”]
Representational Image. Credit: tech2/Nandini Yadav[/caption] In order to improve security, privacy and performance of Chrome extensions, Google had uploaded a post in October on its Chromium blog. A section named ‘Manifest V3’ apparently could hurt ad blocking and privacy extensions, according to a report on CNET
. Currently, Chrome has several rules in place in its design to control the flow of data through extensions. When an ad blocker extension is active on the browser, it scans through a list of ad-based internet addresses and accordingly block them on the active website or webpage. In the original plan, the company was going to introduce a limit of 30,000 such addresses. However, Google confirmed that it’s increasing the maximum to 150,000 now. In the latest Google Security Blog post
, the company said, “We are not preventing the development of ad blockers or stopping users from blocking ads. Instead, we want to help developers, including content blockers, write extensions in a way that protects users’ privacy.” The Manifest V3 design isn’t final according to Google and it’s reiterating all the rules while simultaneously working with the developer community.
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