Apple has deployed a system called Private Access Tokens that allows web servers to verify if a device is legitimate before granting access. This works by having the browser request a signed token from Apple proving the device is approved. While this currently has limited impact due to Safari’s market share, there are concerns that attestation systems restrict competition, user control, and innovation by only approving certain devices and software. Attestation could lead to approved providers tightening rules over time, blocking modified operating systems and browsers. While proponents argue for holdbacks to limit blocking, business pressures may make that infeasible and Google’s existing attestation does not do holdbacks. Fundamentally, attestation is seen as anti-competitive by potentially blocking competition between browsers and operating systems on the web.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        Yeah, but so far you can just spoof your user agent. Not sure how easy cracking private access tokens will be. I assume they’ll be pretty proactive about keeping it locked down.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            …do you really think the devs of these systems don’t understand how to distinguish VMs from authentic devices in their device authenticating platform?

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Again, not an expert on Private Access Tokens, but I assumed the entire point is that it’s a proprietary black box piece of hardware that’s authenticating your device. If it’s just passing a token generated in software, it would be trivial to bypass even without a VM.

            Could you explain to me better what the VM would accomplish in this situation?

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        “Can” and “have a reason” are different things. With attestation they actually have a reason.

  • @[email protected]
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    871 year ago

    If a website doesn’t want me to see their shit, then I guess i won’t see their shit. I already have some sites that don’t work because of my aggressive use of lists on my pihole, in addition to the usual browser plugins. If a site doesn’t work now, I just move on. I don’t give a shit about any site enough to put up with this type of bullshit.

    • Amju Wolf
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      581 year ago

      What if it’s your bank’s website? Or email provider? Or literally anything else you actually have to choose and can’t pick? “It’s okay because I don’t think it affects me / I can ignore it” is always a bad reason to allow a bad thing happen.

        • @[email protected]
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          361 year ago

          Honestly, if you’re telling people to run their own email host, you’re either trolling or a moron.

          • JackbyDev
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            241 year ago

            Yeah, because not only is it viable, they absolutely never get blocked! lol

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              Every time I’ve ever looked into it or read anything on the topic it’s been like “do not do this. I lost my father, my children, two wives, and all my Pokemon cards in this endeavour, but in case you don’t want to listen, here’s how I partially successfully hosted my own email server for three months…”

              • Amju Wolf
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                41 year ago

                It’s not that bad but definitely not a solution for everyone. And you probably still don’t want to do it for your primary mail unless you’re otherwise extremely well versed in doing so, up to and including running multiple servers for redundancy.

              • TheOPtimal
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                11 year ago

                Most of that is about Exchange. Because Microsoft software is always garbage.

                • @[email protected]
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                  101 year ago

                  Not exactly. Having a running software is one thing, not having your emails be blocked by everyone because you’re not a trusted host is another. That another is a deal breaker and a huge pain in the ass, even though it helps fighting spam

            • @[email protected]
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              161 year ago

              You do realize the vast majority of people would need you to explain what a “rented host” is, then they still wouldn’t comprehend it.

          • Neshura
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            1 year ago

            Cannot confirm, somewhat. Setting it up so you don’t get blocked is rather easy, figuring out how to do that correctly is a bit of a pain though (I only managed to correctly set things up once I started using Mailcow and their built in DNS check tool)

            The domain still lands on some blacklists but that is down to one ISP blanket banning any mail servers in the IP block my ISP rotates my IP through.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              Unfortunately google is aggressive at spam filtering. For example when I signed up for bookwormstory.social the confirmation mail was sent straight to spam automatically (I had to fish it out and mark it not as spam) 😔

        • @[email protected]
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          301 year ago

          Change your email provider? Run your own email like people should?

          This isn’t a practical suggestion for the vast majority of the population.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            I have both my own email server and an additional paid email provider. not expensive and has very nice functionality in terms of sync, aliases, etc.

            If they now said I needed some 3rd party bullshit to access their site, I would quit paying them. There are tons of these smaller businesses.

            I doubt they will just be like “oh well, guess i’ll die, Daddy Google said so”

            What i’m saying is, it doesn’t have to be google OR become a tech wizard. There is a middle path that just costs a dollar.

        • Nyla Smokeyface
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          231 year ago

          It’s pretty shitty for a company to force someone to use a phone app or go to something as vital as a bank just because they won’t let the customer access the website. And there are plenty of reasons why someone wouldn’t be able to go to the bank in person every time they needed to, or at least it’d be extremely inconvenient to (especially for small things like checking your balance or transactions). Not everyone has a phone either.

          Change your email provider? Run your own email like people should?

          I’ve never deleted my email before but I’m pretty sure that means losing access to your entire inbox that you’ve likely had for years and having to update your contacts, the emails for all the accounts you have under it, etc. And being blocked from the website means you won’t be able to do any of those things through the official website. Does device atteststion prevent you from accessing your email through third party clients?

          Also, it’s not exactly easy or practical to host your own email. And for many people that would mean spending money on servers. I read a blog post last year of someone who gave up hosting their own email after 23 years doing so.

          • @thepianistfroggollum
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            41 year ago

            I’m moving over to a more professional email now, and it’s a huge pain. A password manager helps a lot.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          How do you “fucking go in” to an online bank? And why are you being so aggressive about a simple question? Getting tired of people still acting like redditors here.

        • @[email protected]
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          151 year ago

          And how the fuck is a phone app an alternative for avoiding attestation??? A phone app is inherently attested by being distributed through the app store.

          • @[email protected]
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            71 year ago

            On a rooted phone, they can still fail attestation, apparently. That’s why Magisk Hide (or whatever it’s called) became a thing, to hide that the device is rooted. Google Pay also apparently needs Magisk Hide to function.

            I don’t trust my phone to store my payment details, so I don’t care about Google Pay, and my bank’s app works fine while rooted, so I don’t have any personal experience with it, just what I’ve seen in every single root guide I’ve used in at least the last 4 years (if not longer; I don’t remember how I rooted my previous phone.)

          • Amju Wolf
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            41 year ago

            Yeah, joke’s on the commenter; Google had had device attestation for phones for ages now and it’s also terrible. Many apps will outright refuse to work if you have a non-typical phone (rooted, some obscure hardware or custom OS).

        • Quokka
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          121 year ago

          Who the fuck goes into a bank in this day and age?

          Shit most branches I see are closing down.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            This is true. However, I don’t see this happening as the website/browser isn’t really the problem with online banking, it’s more often the user.

            On another note, how about no access at all, because this is a freaking huge attack surface for (D)DOS. Imagine you just invalidate signatures of all traffic to and from an attestation service. You could almost stop countries from functioning. That’s a serious vulnerability which we can easily do without.

          • TehPers
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            31 year ago

            I rarely do, but when I do it’s for something a bit specific, like ordering/depositing foreign currency (for travel) or depositing large checks that exceed the online deposit limit (which again is extremely rare). For everything else, it’s online only, especially since every time I go in, there’s only one teller working and the line is super long.

        • LeighM
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          101 year ago

          There’s no need to be so nasty, friend. I’m removing your comment because this isn’t the in line with our community value of ‘be(e) nice’

        • @[email protected]
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          91 year ago

          Use the phone app

          Jokes on you. It refuses to work as my phone configuration is not approved by our corporate overlords. And yeah, obviously you can go to the bank at any moment, there are no times whatsoever when you need to do something right now, without lets say leaving the cash register at the shop

          • Paradoxvoid
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            1 year ago

            And that’s not even getting into how banks worldwide have been cutting down on staff numbers for years, and directing people to just their apps instead.

        • Amju Wolf
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          51 year ago

          Well you can protest, inform others, switch browsers, make your family switch…

          It’s not easy and might not accomplish much but at least you’re trying.

    • @[email protected]
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      191 year ago

      If a website doesn’t want me to see their shit, then I guess i won’t see their shit

      That’s how I react to Twitter and Facebook requiring login to even view most things.

      Whatever you’re showing isn’t important enough to be worth me making an account.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      To see how your approach works, try using the Internet with Javascript turned off for reading text. You will realize you can’t organize your life nowadays without bowing to what websites do technically.

      • Big P
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        71 year ago

        You can’t use websites when you disable a major piece of functionality? Shocker

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          Why would Javascript be a major piece of functionality for a website that is based on text articles?

    • ReallyKinda
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      111 year ago

      I had to stop using my car insurance app because it started requiring location information to open.

  • Neato
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    601 year ago

    Expect corporations to be lazy. Just look at how every website handles cookies now. They could do it smartly, limit their cookie exposure, or only send the messages to IPs in the EU. But they just put an “accept all cookies or get out” OK box on your screen. And that’s what they’re going to do once attestation gets popular.

    Sites will just require an attestation token and likely only accept ones from Safari and Chromium browsers since those are the ones pushing it. That will effectively make Firefox, Opera and other browsers incompatible with those websites. And once it catches on or becomes law somewhere, it’ll be the entire internet. It’s an extremely anticompetitive measure and it’s internet-wide DRM. Fuck. that.

    • HeartyBeast
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      241 year ago

      But they just put an “accept all cookies or get out” OK box on your screen.

      Which doesn’t comply with GDPR

      • @[email protected]
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        181 year ago

        Which only affects companies doing business in the EU. Granted, that’s most of the big players.

        Very grateful for the EU to unfuck most of the world from a lot of American regulatory capture.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Opera is chromium based though.

      You dont even need this DRM bullshit to become law. Chrome will simply put a warning before entering websites without it that goes “this website doesnt use name of a technology the user doesnt understand and therefore might be dangerous”. Thats it. Every and all websites will immediatly implement this DRM bullshit or die.

  • NaN
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    Google mentioned these in their explainer (they don’t like that they’re fully masked): https://github.com/RupertBenWiser/Web-Environment-Integrity/blob/main/explainer.md#privacy-pass--private-access-tokens

    Cloudflare explains them more too: https://blog.cloudflare.com/eliminating-captchas-on-iphones-and-macs-using-new-standard/

    They are currently going through an IETF standardization: https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/privacypass/about/

    You can also read the architecture. In general I do trust Cloudflare more than Google. I have no doubt shitty sites won’t fall back to a captcha and will instead block access though, with either solution.

    • @[email protected]
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      301 year ago

      In general I do trust Cloudflare more than Google.

      A large portion of the internet runs through Cloudflare’s network though, so IMO they’re just as much of a risk as Google.

      • fonix232
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        131 year ago

        However unlike Google, CloudFlare doesn’t have a history of killing off products just as users begin to adapt to them.

        • Atemu
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          191 year ago

          CF has only been public for a few years. Give it a decade and I’m sure they’ll be just as evil as Google.

          • Big P
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            161 year ago

            Public companies will always screw you in the end. It’s part of their fundemental design

        • @[email protected]
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          181 year ago

          That’s not why Google is harmful though - they’re harmful because almost all of their revenue comes from advertising - everything else they offer is just a funnel to gain data on the worlds population in order to better target advertising.

          As for cloudflare - they showed their true colours last year with kiwifarms. They’ll happily host the worst websites in the world as long as they don’t get bad press.

          • @[email protected]
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            191 year ago

            Slight correction, generally cloudflare doesn’t host any sites (this is untrue in specific circumstances, but in your example they certainly didn’t host the site) - they just sit in front of existing sites and store some static assets, otherwise acting like a transparent reverse proxy.

        • @[email protected]
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          The main risk with Cloudflare is that if they think your device is malicious, it gets very hard to browse the internet, as every site hosted behind Cloudflare starts showing CAPTCHAs or rate limiting you. This could get worse if new APIs that determine if you’re legit don’t like you for whatever reason.

        • @[email protected]
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          81 year ago

          That still however doesn’t relieve them. Whether they’ve killed of less products, IMHO still leaves them at the position that they route MASSIVE amounts of the entire internet.

          One point of failure or control is still a big risk, no matter how you turn it

  • @[email protected]
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    231 year ago

    I’m with you there, but that seems like a reason to fight

    This would very likely be added to cloudflare by default (it would lower their costs), and that would put a solid chunk of the Internet behind the blackwall

  • @[email protected]
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    201 year ago

    Back to the days of using a different web browser for each website. I remember the acid test, IE 5.5, etc. Not fun as a user or web developer.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      if you use Safari or Firefox as your main browser it’s already been this way for a while. websites are only tested against Chrome and often times when something doesn’t work switching browsers temporarily alleviates the issue. it’s a sad state of affairs in browser land.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    Actually I like this.

    All those people who’ve been trying to keep corporate technologies “open” were, in fact, working for the corporations to make people come to them. Most unknowingly, maybe. It’s just, well, litany of Gendlin case. You rely on corporate power, even if you are trying to hide it and talk about “open Web”.

    The most important thing is that we take ideologically corporate technology where it’s not needed (there’s been plenty of hypertext systems in history, some kinda successful, and all that JS and AJAX stuff and various frameworks on top are so complex not because of any usefulness, but because of the corporate goal of backward compatibility, lumping everything together and even intentional complexity to cut off competition, and a single space).

    We’d be just fine with a bunch of incompatible between themselves Hypercard-like things working over network. That’s what I think.

    I really dislike Apple for what they’ve been in my somehow conscious years (born 1996), but things like Hypercard and Hotline (or KDX) from their older time seem to be just the right way to use personal computers.

    Any single space with propaganda of “fragmentation being bad” is either not immune to what has happened to the Web, or already compromised.