Chrome lets you override and proceed to the site. The problem for the small business is that a large fraction of their customers see the scary red warning page.
Well, that goes without saying. If you want a blocker, you want a blocker. So all the nigerian princes and the like should still be blocked.
You just don't want to give control over the blocking blacklist/whitelist to a single entity, even less so to a huge powerful one, possibly in a country other than your own (which e.g. forces their foreign policy dictums to your blacklist), and even less so the one that already makes your browser, that should be a totally neutral conduit.
All? I doubt it. Not to mention they could offer control to override whatever you like.
> they could offer control to override
Chrome lets you override and proceed to the site. The problem for the small business is that a large fraction of their customers see the scary red warning page.
Well enough that it will still be a blocker.
Well, that goes without saying. If you want a blocker, you want a blocker. So all the nigerian princes and the like should still be blocked.
You just don't want to give control over the blocking blacklist/whitelist to a single entity, even less so to a huge powerful one, possibly in a country other than your own (which e.g. forces their foreign policy dictums to your blacklist), and even less so the one that already makes your browser, that should be a totally neutral conduit.
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