Firefox users lastly get alternative to obstruct autoplay video, audio

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Bye bye, autoplay video.


Stephen Shankland/ CNET.

Firefox users are lastly getting the alternative to obstruct the video and audio that often starts playing immediately when you go to sites, something currently used on Apple’s Safari and Google’s Chrome internet browsers.

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Firefox Nightly banishes video autoplays



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The option was added over the weekend to Firefox Nightly, the latest test version of Mozilla’s popular web browser, asking users by default whether they want to allow a website to autoplay video with sound. Users also have the option to go into their preferences and block all sites’ autoplay ability if they don’t want to deal with it for each site they visit.

The autoplay blocking is an example of how browsers are getting more assertive on behalf of users faced with pushy websites. The result is a web that should be less annoying to most users — but also one where advertising-funded sites have a harder time with their businesses.

The autoplay blocking option works only in the Nightly test version of Firefox for now, but it’s scheduled to arrive in the main version of the browser in October. The update also includes greater promotion of tracking protection, which blocks website publishers and advertisers from running software that follows your online behavior.

With the release of Chrome 66 in April, Google clamped down on lots of websites that tried to play video and audio automatically. Apple announced a similar feature for Apple’s Safari browser in June 2017 for MacOS High Sierra.

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