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Re: "Mozilla removes the 'do not track' setting"
It was never going to work.
"Do not track? How are we supposed to monetize our users? They won't pay for this dross with money. Oh it's voluntary? Ha! Not doing that."
Dec 11 · 7 days ago
By `thanks` to JS, Cookies, CORS, etc
everything that enabled or disabled in modern web browser by default - means `nothing changed` for me.
🦋 CarloMonte · Dec 11 at 13:10:
This technology is way out of control for most participants. For the user an INCOMPATIBLE, clean restart would be nice: only TLS, URLs, hypertext, CSS, inline data (images etc.) and links.
No scripting, no cookies (we have URLs for that), no embedding, no client-side disclosures (screen resolution, referrals and what not), another PKI concept etc..
Also in dire need is a fair monetization platform. I would be happy to pay, but not to subscribe for sites I visit once in a while. I would even enjoy some high quality advertisments, as were seen in the better newspapers of days past.
This won't happen any time soon, but is clearly doable.
NOTE about the PKI: a new concept is way beyond me; yet, TOFU, the web of trust (GPG), SSH keys all show that alternatives are possible.
It should be possible to quickly set a secure intranet server without having to pay or disclose its existance to third parties (the PKI)!
@CarloMonte The HTML5 standard is actually defined as such and defined to mostly only rely on CSS. So it should be possible for you to say, create a PureHTML conglomerate, where you hand out "verified" stickers.
The beauty if this is that they also can't use and wouldn't even have to be concerned with cookies and GDPR, there wouldn't be any.
So there is a lot of promotional work to be done, but I think it could be spun positively.
You could also do a "speed" verification, mostly meant to check if they are overloading the page with uncompressed images and other nonsense.
🦋 CarloMonte · Dec 11 at 17:01:
almost. incompatible is here the key. i doubt that a smooth transition is possible.
@CarloMonte what incompatibilities? Far as I know HTML5 and CSS3 were written to be stand alone technologies. All browsers should be compatible with it, so it is more of a question of incentivising people to stay away from JS and cookie use.
Shouldn't be too hard either, as most JS pages, load like ass on mobile phones, which is the predominant webviewer now.
🚀 stack [OP] · Dec 11 at 18:25:
Is loading "like ass" bad?
@stack not bad per se, just sticky and flakey. 😂
🚀 stack [OP] · Dec 11 at 18:58:
I suppose the art of the bidet is not universally adopted!
@stack I don't think installing a bidet in your phone is a good idea!
👻 darkghost · Dec 11 at 22:07:
@hansbrix Oh great! NOW you tell me!
Mozilla removes the 'do not track' setting — Citing that "many websites ignore this feature" Mozilla removed it. Many drivers ignore stop lights! Lets remove them too. At least you could see that I did not want to be tracked... Alrhough that probably made me more interesting. [https link] In all likelihood this makes no difference except it does show that we're going in the wrong direction...