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Comments for Lauren Weinstein's Blog

Chrome Remote Desktop – Lauren Weinstein's Blog How Some Software Designers Don’t Seem to Care About the Elderly – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Here’s How to Disable Google Chrome’s Confusing New URL Hiding Scheme – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Social Security Administration Cutting Off Users Who Can’t Receive Text Messages – Lauren Weinstein's Blog YouTube’s Public Videos Dilemma – Lauren Weinstein's Blog YouTube’s Public Videos Dilemma – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Why We May Have to Cut Europe Off from the Internet – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Don’t Blame YouTube and Facebook for Hate Speech Horrors – Lauren Weinstein's Blog A Terrible Decision by the Internet Archive May Lead to Widespread Blocking – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Google Backs Off on Unwise URL Hiding Scheme, but Only Temporarily – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Another Massive Google User Trust Failure, As They Kill Louisville Fiber on Short Notice – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Google Users Panic Over Google+ Deletion Emails: Here’s What’s Actually Happening – Lauren Weinstein's Blog The Tool That Could Save Google+ Relationships – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Google Finally Speaks About the G+ Shutdown: Pretty Much Tells Users to Go to Hell – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Paid “Ad-Free” YouTube Premium Is Now Showing Ads – Lauren Weinstein's Blog The New “Google Contacts” – Lauren Weinstein's Blog A New Invite-Only Forum for Victims of Google’s Google+ Purge – Lauren Weinstein's Blog How to Disable Gmail’s Annoying New “Smart Compose” Predictive Typing Feature – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Fixing Google’s Gmail Spam Problems – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Explaining YouTube’s VERY Cool New Aspect Ratio Changes – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Why We May Have to Cut Europe Off from the Internet – Lauren Weinstein's Blog When Google Gets Your Location Wrong! – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Google Asked Me How I’d Fix Chrome Remote Desktop — Here’s How! – Lauren Weinstein's Blog A Terrible Decision by the Internet Archive May Lead to Widespread Blocking – Lauren Weinstein's Blog Emergency Transition to IPv7 Is Necessary! – Lauren Weinstein's Blog
Google Backs Off on Unwise URL Hiding Scheme, but Only Temporarily – Lauren Weinstein's Blog
2018-09-17 · via Comments for Lauren Weinstein's Blog

In previous posts, including “Here’s How to Disable Google Chrome’s Confusing New URL Hiding Scheme” (https://lauren.vortex.com/2018/09/07/heres-how-to-disable-google-chromes-confusing-new-url-hiding-scheme), I’ve noted the serious security and other problems related to Google Chrome’s new policy of hiding parts of site URLs.

Google has now — sort of, temporarily — backed off on these changes.

In a post over on the Chromium blog, at:

https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=883038

they note that URL subdomain hiding (Google uses the term “elide” — how often do you see that one?) is being rolled back in Chrome M69, but the post also says that they plan to begin hiding — I mean “eliding” — www again in M70, but not “m” (no doubt because they realized what a potential mess that made over on Tumblr). They also say that they’ll initiate a discussion with standards bodies about this to reserve “www or m” as hidden subdomains.

The comments on that Chromium post appear to be virtually universally opposed to Google’s hiding any elements of URLs. At the very least, it’s obvious that Google should not begin such URL modifications again until after such a time (if ever) that standards bodies have acted in these regards, and I would argue that these bodies should not do so in the manner that Google is now pushing.

The www and m subdomains have been integral parts of the user experience on the Web for decades. Tampering with them now (especially www) makes no sense, and (along with the other action that Google took at the same time — hiding the crucial http:// and https:// prefixes that are key signals regarding communications security) just puts users in an even more vulnerable position, as I discussed in “Chrome Is Hiding URL Details — and It’s Confusing People Already!” (https://lauren.vortex.com/2018/07/10/chrome-is-hiding-url-details-and-its-confusing-people-already).

We can certainly have a vibrant discussion regarding additional signals that could help users to detect phishing and other URL-related attacks, but any and all changes to URL displays (including involving http, https, m, www, and so on) should only take place if and after there is broad community agreement that such changes are actually user positive.

Google should completely cease all of these URL changes, permanently, unless such criteria are met.

–Lauren–