Using a free browser is now more important than ever. 
We've written recently on this topic, but the issue we wrote 
about there was minor compared to the gross injustice Google 
is now attempting to force down the throats of web users 
around the world. 
The so-called "Web Environment Integrity" (WEI) is the worst 
stunt we've seen from them in some time. Beginning its life 
as an innocuous, if worrying, policy document posted to 
Microsoft GitHub, Google has now fast-tracked its development 
into their Chromium browser. At its current rate of progress, 
WEI will be upon us in no time.

By giving developers an API through which they can approve 
certain browser configurations while forbidding others, WEI is 
a tremendous step toward the "enshittification" of the web 
as a whole. Many of us have grown up with a specific idea of 
the Internet, the notion of it as a collection of hyperlinked 
pages that can be accessed by a wide variety of different 
machines, programs, and operating systems. 
WEI is this idea's antithesis.

Compared to its staggering potential effects, the technical 
means through which WEI will accomplish its ends is relatively 
simple. Before serving a web page, a server can ask a third-party 
"verification" service to make sure that the user's browsing 
environment has not been "tampered" with. A translation of the 
policy's terminology will help us here: this Google-owned server 
will be asked to make sure that the browser does not deviate in 
any way from Google's accepted browser configuration, precluding
any meaningful use of the four freedoms. It is not far-fetched 
to imagine a future in which sites simply refuse to serve pages 
to users running free browsers or free operating systems. 
If WEI isn't stopped now, that future will come sooner than we think.

While Web Environment Integrity has a policy document that attempts 
to explain valid ways in which it could be used, these are all 
non-issues compared to the way that we know it will be used. 
It will be used by governments to ensure that only their officially 
"approved" (read: backdoored) browsers are able to access the 
Internet; it will be used by corporations like Netflix to further
Digital Restrictions Management (DRM); it will be used by Google
to deny access to their services unless you are using a browser
that gels with their profit margin.

Once upon a time, Google's official policy was "don't be evil." 
With the rapid progress they've made on Web Environment Integrity 
in such a short time, we can say very safely that their policy 
is now to pioneer evil. 
As we write this, talented and well-paid Google engineers and 
executives are working to dismantle what makes the web the web. 
Given that Google is one of the largest corporations on the planet,
our only hope of saving the Internet as we know it is a clear and 
principled stance for freedom, a collective upholding of the 
communal principles on which the web was based.

Let us repeat: there is absolutely no legitimate justification for WEI. 
The use cases that the policy document highlights are nothing compared
to its real use case, which is developing a method to obtain complete
and total restriction of the free Internet.

We urge everyone involved in a decision-making capacity at Google
to consider the principles on which the web was founded, and to 
carefully contemplate whether Web Environment Integrity aligns
with those principles.
We hope that they will realize WEI's fundamental incompatibility 
with the free Internet and cease work on the standard immediately.

And if they don't? Well, they ought to be ashamed.


https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/web-environment-integrity-is-an-all-out-attack-on-the-free-internet

Dopo tutti questi anni di Google, sperare che gli sviluppatori di
Google si vergognino di ciò che stanno facendo è estremamente ingenuo.

Può però essere utile a chi legge i suoi lobbisti più o meno
insospettabili, sapere a cosa Google sta puntando da anni.


Ma come con ChatGPT e Microsoft/OpenAI, anche in questo caso vedremo
spuntare come funghi allucinogeni diversi utili idioti pronti a difendere 
a spada tratta la povera Google che non vuole altro che proteggere 
i poveri utenti... dalla propria libertà.

Loro non si vergogneranno, ma noi potremo indignarci disgustati.


Giacomo
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