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Chrome may block images and videos from your current website

Posted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 5:56 am
by asimd22
At PGR we offer Graphic Design and Web Programming services especially focused on B2B companies in the ICT Sector. We prepare your website so that Chrome does not block your content.
Google Chrome has been the leading browser since 2012 and is currently the preferred browser by users. According to the latest monthly study by W3Counter , it has the largest market share with 57%, an overwhelming figure if we take into account that its closest follower, Safari, has only 13.4%.

Chrome will stop loading images and videos that don't have HTTPS
During this month of December, Google phone lookup philippines will launch its Chrome 79 version and with it it will begin to do a progressive blocking, therefore from this new version, Chrome will begin to handle differently the content that we see when we browse a website , specifically the "mixed content", which are those sites that load through HTTPS but use HTTP resources .

Until now, Chrome had blocked scripts and iframes by default if they started with HTTP, but allowed static content, such as images or videos, to be displayed. Starting with the new Chrome 79 version, all this will change and photos and videos will no longer be displayed on websites that load these contents with HTTP .

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Google believes that the HTTP protocol threatens user privacy and the security of their data
HTTP: Hypertext Transfer Protocol is the communication protocol that allows information transfers on the World Wide Web. (Wikipedia)

HTTPS: Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure is an application protocol based on the HTTP protocol, intended for the secure transfer of hypertext data, i.e. it is the secure version of HTTP. (Wikipedia)

Mixed content refers to sites whose address begins with HTTPS but use resources, such as images, videos, and audio, that load using HTTP.

Google explains that it is possible to alter mixed content, giving as an example a fake stock chart that can fool investors or inject tracking code to obtain users' IP addresses or browsing activity.

Because of this, Google began classifying HTTP websites as unsafe a few years ago. However, they have not managed to eliminate all the sites that use this protocol. Therefore, they have decided to gradually start blocking mixed content on websites.