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Is Chrome the New IE? (2023)

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281 points bentocorp | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.68s | source
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asddubs ◴[] No.42169280[source]
Just to (mostly) preempt this because the exact same discussion is had every time this sentiment comes up: Isn't safari the new IE?

Answer: They both are like IE, for different reasons:

Chrome: Pushes proprietary extensions onto the web, which due to their absolute dominance others are somewhat forced to adopt, people develop for it and don't test in any other browser, just like IE

Safari: is coupled to operating system version, lags behind on implementing new features, thus single handedly slowing down when everyone can use new features. Has weird quirks that other browsers don't, just like IE (though not nearly as bad as IE)

So which is like IE? It just depends on what you mean when you say "like IE", the label applies to both because IE was bad for more than one reason

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dwaite ◴[] No.42169318[source]
If I understand - Chrome is like IE for pushing proprietary extensions, and Safari is like IE for not implementing those proprietary extensions?
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do_not_redeem ◴[] No.42169330[source]
Safari is like IE for not implementing standards everyone else has agreed on and implemented.
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1. grapesodaaaaa ◴[] No.42169483[source]
Some of those unimplemented “standards” are to protect user privacy. I know this is not universally the case, but it’s worth calling out.
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2. threeseed ◴[] No.42169491[source]
You can fingerprint a browser to > 99.9% accuracy because of Google's lax approach to privacy and security when adding new features.

Of course this benefits the advertising side of the business immensely.