but was bound to happen. however it's a bit appalling how stupid the pr is:
- Create your own content and distribute it in all sorts of ways without being restricted to the network - Share a web app or piece of web content with your friends via Bluetooth or Wi-Fi Direct - Carry your site on your own USB or even host it on your own local network
can't i do exactly the same right now? and this comes from the warriors of 'on demand and fast initial loading'?
Disclaimer: Professional Senior Web Developer here.
I am highly sceptical of bloating the web further. WebAssembly is a good thing, webm is a good thing and Google deserves credit for that. However, I see nothing complex that this solution offers that can't be done with HTTP 2 Push, which we already have. I also really like the fact that despite all the VDOM bloat we have to deal these days I can still just push out clean HTML with some well built CSS and have a website that looks and runs neat and doesn't r
All they really need to fix all this is to require a "point of origin" URL for each component of the bundle for where you can download the identical file. If the point of origin data doesn't match then the domain serving the bundle should be marked as a malicious website and should be delisted from search engines.
They could do this but won't because the entire point is to bypass ad blocking.
but was bound to happen. however it's a bit appalling how stupid the pr is:
- Create your own content and distribute it in all sorts of ways without being restricted to the network
- Share a web app or piece of web content with your friends via Bluetooth or Wi-Fi Direct
- Carry your site on your own USB or even host it on your own local network
can't i do exactly the same right now? and this comes from the warriors of 'on demand and fast initial loading'?
Disclaimer: Professional Senior Web Developer here.
I am highly sceptical of bloating the web further. WebAssembly is a good thing, webm is a good thing and Google deserves credit for that. However, I see nothing complex that this solution offers that can't be done with HTTP 2 Push, which we already have. I also really like the fact that despite all the VDOM bloat we have to deal these days I can still just push out clean HTML with some well built CSS and have a website that looks and runs neat and doesn't r
All they really need to fix all this is to require a "point of origin" URL for each component of the bundle for where you can download the identical file. If the point of origin data doesn't match then the domain serving the bundle should be marked as a malicious website and should be delisted from search engines.
They could do this but won't because the entire point is to bypass ad blocking.
Given that the CEO, Brendan Eich, is openly and proudly homophobic, should we even trust anything Brave wants?
Nice ad hominen there...
He might even be a raging Nazi, that doesn't make his message any less true.