Event JSON
{
"id": "2c9b5ad822ac8528224ffe198c91250aa4b71aed2d1da10f59fa8736608a5cd9",
"pubkey": "582a41c6eca3d12c80acd248a7c8f3070c83c859b9ac1739cbecc074cf09a747",
"created_at": 1720815561,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"582a41c6eca3d12c80acd248a7c8f3070c83c859b9ac1739cbecc074cf09a747"
],
[
"e",
"129cc272bf5e02907230ed359a075a27f6b40fe2e7ee7cf6c51dac9ee3eb6fe5",
"",
"reply"
],
[
"e",
"8bff161fc859660d899c2bf024ea554ae43ed6960698b79a174b6ef46472446f",
"",
"root"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://mastodon.social/@mcc/112775368662397273",
"web"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://mastodon.social/users/mcc/statuses/112775368662397273",
"activitypub"
],
[
"L",
"pink.momostr"
],
[
"l",
"pink.momostr.activitypub:https://mastodon.social/users/mcc/statuses/112775368662397273",
"pink.momostr"
],
[
"-"
]
],
"content": "Now to be clear, the disclosure Chrome provides to users is not *adequate*. Their wording of the \"Ad Privacy\" feature popup is highly disingenuous and the process to disable once notification is given is too complex and must be performed on a per-profile basis. But at least they *do it*, and to my knowledge don't track/send the data until the popup is displayed. Whereas Firefox just snuck this in in a software update, checked by default and you're probably learning about it now, on social media.",
"sig": "c3bdff61b5790417e83cbb981c3c21bfce4fb2cfe7a98b11d3d33f4314bead9056ed9ba6214a2b1f315200b78e470f0aa3570ab6fdc5f04f96028067ef5ddfab"
}