This is the correct answer. All of the replies saying to use Firefox/support FOSS are missing the point. Once Google rolls this out and promotes it as higher security and guaranteed ad impressions, it will become the standard because all of the websites you want to use will opt in. It won’t do you much good to keep using Firefox when your bank, your employer/school, and every news/weather/sports site you try to use require a Google-verified, ad-displaying browser. It’s not our choice to make, and that’s the point of doing it this way.
I’d go one cynical step further to say that once they have complete control over how pages are displayed on your end, they’ll roll out a subscription for ad-free* browsing, which will eventually include ads anyway a couple years down the road.
I’d just try to spend as little time as possible on websites that require using Chrome. Probably would be plenty of sites resistant to implementing it (at least those worth visiting). I wonder if Gemini protocol would get a boost in popularity.
This is the correct answer. All of the replies saying to use Firefox/support FOSS are missing the point. Once Google rolls this out and promotes it as higher security and guaranteed ad impressions, it will become the standard because all of the websites you want to use will opt in. It won’t do you much good to keep using Firefox when your bank, your employer/school, and every news/weather/sports site you try to use require a Google-verified, ad-displaying browser. It’s not our choice to make, and that’s the point of doing it this way.
I’d go one cynical step further to say that once they have complete control over how pages are displayed on your end, they’ll roll out a subscription for ad-free* browsing, which will eventually include ads anyway a couple years down the road.
I’d just try to spend as little time as possible on websites that require using Chrome. Probably would be plenty of sites resistant to implementing it (at least those worth visiting). I wonder if Gemini protocol would get a boost in popularity.
Yeah there’s a reason why all other forms of media throughout history have become privatized by the biggest corporations.
It always happens and you can’t stop it. Stopping it would require mega-rich people who cared about the greater good, which is an oxymoron.