this post was submitted on 23 Dec 2024
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Google is offering a far more pared-down solution to the court’s ruling that it illegally monopolized search

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[–] masterofn001@lemmy.ca 100 points 2 months ago (14 children)

They can keep chrome if they open source everything and remove all tracking, telemetry, and calling home of any sort, artificial crippling of addons via manifestV3, stop blocking blockers, stop injecting ads, stop breaking APIs, stop asynchronous and default DNS, stop forcing safebrowsing (URL monitoring).

What else have I missed?

[–] trevor@lemmy.blahaj.zone 79 points 2 months ago (10 children)

They would still have disproportionate control over web standards. They should not be allowed to keep Chrome/Chromium under any circumstances.

[–] olympicyes@lemmy.world 32 points 2 months ago (9 children)

I still don’t see how a standalone web browser survives financially. It seems like Firefox is always near death and has to make compromising decisions. Do you have any thoughts on how this ought to work?

[–] upandatom@lemmy.world 0 points 2 months ago

This point comes up a lot, but how does Photoshop survive? If chrome were split, Im sure they would find ways to make it work.

Corporate licensing would probably be the #1 way they could survive easily. The general public sees alternatives as "junk" to the main thing when it comes to tech. This, imo, is why Firefox is near death.

Now idk if the licensing route would be better or worse for us.

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