The EFF will fight Google Chrome Manifest v3 which kills extensions that 
reliably block ads

By Alap Naik Desai · Dec 14, 2021 
https://www.neowin.net/news/the-eff-will-fight-google-chrome-manifest-v3-which-kills-extensions-that-reliably-block-ads/


Google Chrome will gradually undergo a fundamental revision, and it will deeply 
impact all extensions for the web browser.

The upcoming revised set of Application Programming Interfaces (APIs), 
collectively known as Manifest v3, will essentially kill all popular 
ad-blocking extensions.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation or EFF has vowed to fight this change, but 
it could be a losing battle.

The EFF has promised to take on Google, and attempt to convince the tech giant 
to rethink the Chrome Manifest v3.

Essentially, the consortium is trying to repeal the detrimental set of APIs 
which primarily seek to decimate some specific and popular extensions for the 
Chrome web browser.

EFF technologists Alexei Miagkov and Bennett Cyphers have reportedly called out 
Google for deliberately hampering ad blocking extensions under the guise of 
development.

“According to Google, Manifest v3 will improve privacy, security, and 
performance. We fundamentally disagree. The changes in Manifest v3 won’t stop 
malicious extensions, but will hurt innovation, reduce extension capabilities, 
and harm real-world performance,” stated Miagkov.

Technical jargon aside, the Manifest v3 is a big departure from the Manifest 
v2, on which the Google Chrome web browser currently runs.

In its current iteration, the Manifest v2 has an API which is a blocking 
version of "webRequest". It allows extensions to intercept incoming network 
data and process/filter it before it gets displayed in the browser.

However, Google is replacing the powerful and effective API with 
"declarativeNetRequest".

Needless to mention, this API essentially declaws the ad blockers and renders 
them nearly useless. Essentially, under the new Manifest v3, ad blockers may 
have to perform the role of a bystander, instead of a gatekeeper.

Google has steadfastly maintained that it must limit the capabilities of Chrome 
extensions so that “their powers to observe and alter the contents of pages are 
not so easily abused by bad or hijacked extensions.”

These proposed changes are highly concerning primarily because browsers like 
Brave and Microsoft Edge rely on Google's open-source Chromium project as a 
base.

This means ad blockers for these web browsers would also lose their 
effectiveness.

Perhaps Google could drive up the adoption of Mozilla Firefox, but only if the 
web browser takes a firm stand, which it hasn’t, yet.

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