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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 18th, 2023

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  • Let’s say YouTube has a video and 2 ads:

    1. The video is served from videos.example.tld/video.mp4.
    2. The first ads is served from videos.example.tld/ads/ads1.mp4.
    3. The second ads is served from ads.company.tld/ads2.mp4.

    PiHole will be able to block only (3) because DNS applies at domain level, as in videos.example.tld. DNS requests only send the domain part and re-use the response for all addresses using that domain.

    Browser extension, on the other hand, sees a request to .../ads... and block it since it handled each HTTP/S request and know the full URL.




  • tvbusy@lemmy.dbzer0.comtoMemes@lemmy.mlfirefox
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    1 year ago

    I see it the other way around. I have a feeling that FireFox follows the specs while Chromium kind of has its own plan and directly introduce new behavior without much care for standards.

    Since Chromium based browsers have the majority of the market share, you have the feeling that FireFox is awkward/lag behind. Now look back at Opera when they still have their own engine and you will see that while they try to introduce new behaviors just like Chromium, their limited market share means that people don’t feel the need to make use of these “innovations”.



  • CEOs tends to think they’re special. They do not think they are there because of right time right place.

    I work in tech and I have seen how a small change in organization structure, such as a Product Manager leaving, or adjusting how Product, Engineering and Marketing working together, having a huge impact on how the business operates. Yet most CEOs think the company is where they are because of their own decisions. It’s quite the other way around: CEOs suggesting stupid policies and other people cleaning up the shit, like “let’s all go back to office because I’m lonely here”, despite majority of employees work remotely from another fricking country.