With how so many services are forcing it upon us, I’d have to disagree.
It’s also getting to be a bit of a chore to block AI elements on all the various websites implementing them, and a few of the worst offenders (Google is one that I know does this) add a random string of characters on the element that serve as a unique identifier that periodically changes and so requires me to readd them to my UBO blocklist. On each device…
It is the most effective solution for sure, though.
and a few of the worst offenders (Google is one that I know does this) add a random string of characters on the element that serve as a unique identifier that periodically changes and so requires me to readd them to my UBO blocklist.
Does ubo accept css selectors? Css has syntax for “match element that starts with, ends with, or contains, this string”
With how so many services are forcing it upon us, I’d have to disagree.
It’s also getting to be a bit of a chore to block AI elements on all the various websites implementing them, and a few of the worst offenders (Google is one that I know does this) add a random string of characters on the element that serve as a unique identifier that periodically changes and so requires me to readd them to my UBO blocklist. On each device…
It is the most effective solution for sure, though.
Does ubo accept css selectors? Css has syntax for “match element that starts with, ends with, or contains, this string”
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Attribute_selectors
Dunno, I’d have to investigate this later. Thanks for the info!
You don’t have to block them. Just don’t use them.
Maybe we need to add a term for anti-AI psychosis. Like an equivalent of ‘going postal’?