The way it's framed in the issue is "DNR is an obstacle to innovation." This is concerning because it means that if sites / ad networks start coming up with ways to serve ads which can't be blocked by DeclarativeNetRequest (the issue lists a few), then ublock origin won't be able to block those ads. The fundamental issue seems to be that by mv3 prevents you from running arbitrary code to do filtering. I rely mostly on the discussion around the implications for ublock origin when looking at manifest v3, because gorhill seems to be engaging with it in good faith.īrowsing the issue about it ( ), it seems that manifest v3 blocks quite a lot of stuff out of the box. But even with those things it's still the most performant and capable browser. Yes, Chrome is terrible for even more reasons than the ones shown here - the direct integration of Google sign-on into the browser is awful, and the in-page text highlighting through (#:~:text=) is a big anti-feature (that now is being copied by the others, oh well), and after I spent so much effort trying to prune down the stupid buttons on my address bar only to find that they keep adding new, useless ones that are un-removeable ("reading panel"? why are they doing this?). Every once in a while I try to make the switch (to Firefox because I'm not generally a mac user, but I use safari on iOS and I'm basically resigned to its limitations)īuggy rendering is very common - maybe the site, or maybe the browser, who knows, but anecdotally I've had a lot of bad experiences, including lost work filling out multi-page forms.Īnd I hate to mention it, but aesthetically I find Firefox to be very clunky and ugly. It's 2023, Safari and Firefox have been very good for a while.
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