this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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Web dev here. It enforces the original markup and code from a server to be the markup and code that the browser interprets and executes, preventing any post-loading modifications.
That sounds a bit dry, but the implications are huge. It means:
These are just a few things off the top of my head. There are endless and very dangerous implications to WEI. This is very, very bad for the web and antithesis of how it's supposed to be.
TBL is probably experiencing a sudden disturbance in the force.
I'm not saying you're wrong or that Web Environment Integrity is a good thing, but a primary source and citation is needed for this statement:
Read between the lines, dude. Ad blockers work by observing and analyzing the DOM for elements presenting or containing ads and subsequently removing or obscuring those elements by manipulating the DOM. There's no way for WEI to carry out its purported goals without forcibly preventing DOM manipulation.
There are absolutely no conceivable benefits for users. None.
I don't disagree, and I'm personally aware of the consequences. Adding the API would be the first step, and future proposals and changes could amend it to add other environment details to tell a website that there are browser extensions that can read or modify the page.
I don't really think summarizing WEI as though it already includes those really helps people understand what WEI currently is or does, though. Nobody reads the actual documentation before repeating what they were told, and that's going to lead to the spread of factually-incorrect information. It's not a bad thing for people to be aware of the long-term issue with having a WEI API, but users' lack of understanding of WEI in its current form is just going to be used by Google as proof to dismiss dissenting feedback as FUD.
I didn't read through the entire spec, but I read enough to sniff out their Trojan horseshit. I'm not regurgitating anything, I'm calling it as I see it.
This is of benefit to no one but for corporate overlords to do more overlording. It's fixing a problem that doesn't exist.
I don't know why you're trying to hard to defend one the biggest corporations on earth that decidedly not-not-evil, but if I ever need a top notch recipe for robust leather footwear, I'll be sure to call you up.
So your suggestion is hopefully later, google will allow extensions even though their proposals are against it. This is the company that rolled out web manifest v3, a proposal to limit and remove extensions. Their past actions have demonstrated motives opposite to what you are implying could happen. It's entirely wishful thinking.
Google may want to place themselves judge and jury of what software is allowed on a computer, but anyone of sane mind should not be considering allowing them.
HTTPS already prevents man in the middle attacks and changes to the website content to protect users. This is to protect companies from users. It's horrific and an attack on the web freedoms that have so long been held.
I believe there's a misunderstanding somewhere. I wasn't suggesting anything; I was explaining how Web Environment Integrity could be altered in the future to kill extensions.
The current form of WEI does not have the ability to enforce anything. It isn't itself DRM, and it can't prevent extensions from running on pages. What it can do and the only thing it does, is tell websites about the browser environment.
Right now, the only thing it tells websites is the name of the browser. A website having the browser name can't directly enforce page integrity. It's already possible to find out the browser name through the user agent or by fingerprinting it with JavaScript.
If WEI is approved and implemented, that opens up the possibility for future additions to the specification. Those changes could require that the browser sends more info to websites. I gave the example of a change that would require WEI tells the website that the browser has an extension which could modify the page contents.
A website having that information would turn WEI into DRM. It gives the website the choice to refuse service to any browser that is running an extension that could change what the user sees.
I hope that was more clear. I don't expect Google to make changes that immediately block extensions, and then be kind enough to allow some of them back. I suspect they would make changes that don't prevent extensions, and then revise them to prevent certain types of extensions.
I think most of what you have said is reasonable.
I think the concern I have is in what they said they will do. That is quite disturbing, and unless they are lying, that is where their intention is. Combined with web manifest v3, it's clear they are quite motivated and they have a long term plan here. They're dropping it piece by piece perhaps to remove opposition to it. Rather than stab someone to death, it'll be death by papercuts. My view is we should take the paper off them now based on what we know, rather than waiting until they kill someone.
My concerns is beyond extensions, it's when it goes towards browsers, and operating systems. My concerns is with the focus on attestation, is this is going to have the potential to tie in to TPM and could be potentially used for fingerprinting based on hardware regardless of what you try to do. There is a number of things in motion that independently seem benign but when combined together, are absolutely disturbing. Giving google control over what is and isn't approved is dangerous. They simply cannot be trusted.