The similar <geolocation> element has clickjacking prevention enforced by the browser[0], and even if the website finds a way around it, it still shows the normal permission prompt.[1]
To be sure, evil websites will still be able to put misleading content around the element, and hope that the least savvy users will be fooled or will click the button out of confusion. But they can already do that with the existing JavaScript-triggered permission prompt.
It's kind of insane to me that effort was put into all these fuzzy make-your-site-randomly-not-work heuristics and at the end of the day it still pops open the permission dialog anyway. It's like the worst of both worlds
The immediate thought is re-prompt spam, for eternity, even with an appropriate signal sent from the user agent. This is the same as cookie banners - keep flushing the cookies after each session if the user agent doesn’t accept and wait until they do.
It’s a techbros wet dream on consent. Just keep asking until they say yes.
"Press here to view the content", there's already plenty in the wild that grant access to notifications with deceptive buttons.
The similar <geolocation> element has clickjacking prevention enforced by the browser[0], and even if the website finds a way around it, it still shows the normal permission prompt.[1]
[0]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/HTMLGeoloca...
[1]: https://mdn.github.io/dom-examples/geolocation-element/basic... (requires Chromium)
To be sure, evil websites will still be able to put misleading content around the element, and hope that the least savvy users will be fooled or will click the button out of confusion. But they can already do that with the existing JavaScript-triggered permission prompt.
It's kind of insane to me that effort was put into all these fuzzy make-your-site-randomly-not-work heuristics and at the end of the day it still pops open the permission dialog anyway. It's like the worst of both worlds
“targeted and functional controls for accessing camera and microphone streams”
The immediate thought is re-prompt spam, for eternity, even with an appropriate signal sent from the user agent. This is the same as cookie banners - keep flushing the cookies after each session if the user agent doesn’t accept and wait until they do.
It’s a techbros wet dream on consent. Just keep asking until they say yes.
But it’s only showing a button and then the prompt when you click the button. Unless you click the button, it can’t spam you with permissions.
Just make the button transparent over the whole site and make it so you have to accept before it will let you do anything.
1 reply →