We’ve learned that when you make a significant change to a browser, indeed - this browser - communication is key. How does it service the users to yoink the browser from the archives? It turns out, we know! So they are packaging Chromium “ For The Users”. But their users likely do value these features. If that’s the case, they likely don’t care for the proprietary sync service behind the API in the Google datacentre. ![]() The packagers of the open source Chromium browser are almost certainly friends of Free and Open Source (FOSS) software, or they wouldn’t be packaging it. Is the hope of these packagers to irritate Google into reinstating the API and thus restore the missing functionality? How would that work if Google doesn’t though? With fewer people using Chromium if it is removed, surely those users will look for similar functionality elsewhere? Where would they possibly go? Google Chrome maybe? The only way they have to express this is to “down tools” and walk away, effectively to go on strike. So given Google, the main sponsor of the project is totally capable of doing something to undo this, and as yet haven’t, is causing frustration for those packagers. I can maybe see the argument that packagers are doing the Chromium project a favour by packaging the software and distributing it to millions. So that’s many client machines checking into servers in the Google cloud to stash important user information, and enable features. I have no idea how many users of Chromium there are, but I’d put a guess it’s not insignificant. Yes, it’s frustrating that the proprietary version of Google Chrome gets to keep those features. Sure, it’s unfortunate that a set of features in an application will go away. What I don’t fully fathom is why they’re trying to collectively eject Chromium from the corpus of available software. ![]() I can understand how software packagers around the world who have spent significant effort in making Chromium available to millions of Linux users, would be irritated about this. This will be disallowed from March 15th - in a month or so. ![]() On the Chromium blog it was announced a couple of weeks back that some API calls which “are only intended for Google’s use” were indeed used by Chromium. While the proprietary Google Chrome is built on the same technology as the open source Chromium browser, they’re not the same. Chromium (perhaps unsurprisingly) falls into this category. This appears to have come about because of a change being made by Google, which reduces functionality in third party chromium-based browsers. Rumours are swirling in Linux circles that some prominent distributions are preparing to remove the Open Source Chromium web browser from their archives.
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