![]() ![]() ![]() That means that if you’re using something like AdNauseam, and it gets banned from the store, then the next time you connect Chrome on your computer to the internet the extension will be removed from your PC, too. The plugin is called AdNauseam, and it claims on its website to be a “not-for-profit, research-based privacy tool.” In a statement on its site, AdNauseam developers allege that Google utterly banned it from the Chrome Web Store as of January 1.Īdditionally, thanks to a policy change Google enacted back in 2014, extensions that are removed from the Chrome Web Store are also removed from existing Chrome installations for users. Yet, the makers of one ad-blocker say Google has thrown their app out of the Chrome store, and disabled the service’s function in Chrome for all users. Every major browser app lets you run plug-ins or extensions that can banish unsightly, privacy-compromising ads from your sight, and these browsers generally stay out of the escalating war between ad-blocking users and ad-blocker-blocking sites. 1.18.17 11:01 AM EDT By Kate Cox the blockers blocked ad blockers google chrome ad nauseam badvertising advertisingĪd-blockers might have started out as kind of a weird niche thing for techies and privacy advocates, but they’re now commonplace.
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