Monopolies: https://t.co/XDIRKuzDQD
— Suhail (@Suhail) January 16, 2021
You can’t willingly give permission to sync your browser data to anyone else.
After working for years, they gave everyone 2 months of lead time.
Google cracking down on #chromium-based browsers that were managing to integrate with some features that were intended to be "Chrome-only". Classic google.#opensource #googlesucks #istilluseit #privacy #software
— Andrew Vcourt (@avcourt) January 16, 2021
https://t.co/SZ5ymO0ZoS
Monopolies: https://t.co/XDIRKuzDQD
— Suhail (@Suhail) January 16, 2021
You can’t willingly give permission to sync your browser data to anyone else.
After working for years, they gave everyone 2 months of lead time.
구글, 크롬 기반 타사 웹브라우저에서 크롬 동기화, 클릭 투 콜 등 기능 이용, 데이터 접근 할 수 있음 발견하고 해당 API 3/15 제한 예정
— lunamoth (@lunamoth) January 15, 2021
Chromium Blog: Limiting Private API availability in Chromium https://t.co/FejWjRv4ly
Google cracks down on 3rd-party Chromium browsers using Chrome Sync https://t.co/MbKtJhUQqG
— XDA (@xdadevelopers) January 15, 2021
Google said it caught "some third-party Chromium browsers" abusing its Chrome Sync feature to store their own users data on Google servers
— Catalin Cimpanu (@campuscodi) January 15, 2021
It said it would be cutting off access to all Chrome APIs inside Chromium browsers starting March 15, 2021.https://t.co/zWAE0Km1sH pic.twitter.com/2zRvHIeIy3
Google cuts off other Chromium-based browsers from its Sync service | ZDNet https://t.co/yzowQLpLD5
— Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols (@sjvn) January 16, 2021
Google cuts off other Chromium-based browsers from its Sync service https://t.co/XSB01fifN7 by @campuscodi
— ZDNet (@ZDNet) January 15, 2021