12 Matching Annotations
  1. Aug 2023
    1. people do not trust the entity creating the technology
    2. Similar APIs for validating native apps in the Android and iOS ecosystems already exist.
    3. WEI provides a way for a browser to prove it is working as a website operator expects, and hasn't been manipulated
    4. However, "abuse" is not specifically defined.
    5. publishers have a want for their ad-based business models to work, and they thereby would like to have a way to require users to only use trusted browsers that will comply
    6. The concerns raised include: potential violation of EU data rules; all web interaction would be subject to attestation – something Google explicitly rejects; barriers to new browsers; general distrust of Google; worries about DRM for the web; possible limitations on ad blocking; and more.
    7. The stated purpose of the API is to address various long-standing problems on the web: social media manipulation and fakery; bot detection; misuse of WebViews in apps; bulk web hijacking and account creation; cheating in web-based games; compromised devices; and password-guessing attempts.
    8. "If websites are going to require 'this is proven to be one of a small, trusted set of browsers – unmodified from their original behavior – that we believe will, in fact, show our ads to a real user,' then the bar only goes up for building a new web browser."
    9. it's turning the browser from a User-Agent into double agent working also in the interest of advertisers and other corporate players
    10. A framework for enabling publishers to make their customers their enemies is a framework for profoundly screwing the pooch.
    11. Some in the internet community fear this is the end of the web as we know it.
    12. Googlers have proposed a way to determine whether browsers can be trusted, as a defense against criminal fraud and other bad behavior.