Brave, a browser that promises to prioritize you “not the big tech companies,” announced the release of version 1.45 in late October. new Blocks cookie warning pop-ups that appear on most websitesmakes it uncomfortable for many users to navigate.
Update already available in the development version of the app – Brave Nightgown –will initially present a dialog where you click “yes” to block all cookie warnings. The innovation works through a set of rules and filters that those who use ad blocking extensions in browsers are already familiar with.
On the browser blog, the Brave team invokes the cookie consent request “an infamous and almost constant nuisance”Referring to a study on this application prepared in 2019 by researchers at the University of the Côte d’Azur in France.
One step ahead of Google
To fulfill its promise to block the famous cookie banners, Brave will have to stay one step ahead of companies running so-called “consent management systems.” read google. This is because Big Tech has prepared changes on the web that will make it harder to block cookie banners.
According to Brave’s blog post, the Mountain View company’s WebBundles proposal, which bundles all of its websites into “bundles,” will allow them to bypass content blockers. Additionally, the transition to Manifest V3, the next version of the extension engine for Chrome – is planned for 2023 – will remove vital features of existing browser extensions that protect protection and privacy.
“The web was made to be open. On the one hand, that’s great: it’s a web tool that protects privacy.as brave, can act on behalf of users and protect them from abuse and inconvenience”, ends browser announcement.
Source: Tec Mundo
