They don’t want every government to immediately ban the use of Chrome on government computers …
Comment on Google Chrome to soon get a new ‘IP protection’ feature: Here’s what it does
ripcord@kbin.social 1 year agoThey ship the browser, which on at least many OSes has the certificate store. And Android. They can ship whatever they want.
People fall for all kinds of shit for reasonableish-soubdubg security reasons. Lots of people would have said they didn't believe people would go for this either.
fubo@lemmy.world 1 year ago
ripcord@kbin.social 1 year ago
Can you really not imagine a way that they'd ship a feature like that - maybe, disabled permanently with a corporate policy - where this wouldn't be a problem?
I mean, this current feature isn't something that most governments really wouldn't want their users using either. Or the existing "secure DNS" feature, etc.
fubo@lemmy.world 1 year ago
It’s not a matter of imagination. There’s specific infra preventing this from being done secretly. Look up “Certificate Transparency”.
darth_helmet@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
Ok, but they still present the certificate to the user. They’d have to be very fucky with how they present that information if they were doing the validation at the proxy and then passing back that cert info.
And yeah, regular users might fall for that shit but Chrome would be banned across the corporate landscape the second it was found out.
ripcord@kbin.social 1 year ago
That optional feature might be banned. Having enough people to opt into it to be profitable would make it worth it. You may be underestimating the # of people who wouldn't care if it was packaged well.