It's being reported on HackerNews that the Pale Moon Browser is blocking the AdNauseum extension, an ad blocking extension designed to obfuscate browsing data and protect users from tracking by advertising networks.
The main story link is to the Pale Moon Forum which summarises the issue as follows:
After investigating the AdNauseam extension's behavior and the results for web publishers, the extension has been added to the Pale Moon blocklist with a severity level of 2 (meaning you won't be able to enable it unless you increase the blocking level in about:config to 3). For those unfamiliar with this extension: it generates false ad "clicks" to ad servers in an attempt to generate "noise" for the ad networks in a protest against the advertising network system as a whole.
While the premise behind this is similar to poisoning trackers with false fingerprints (which we are proponents of, ourselves), and we normally let users decide for themselves what they want to do with their browser, we are strictly against allowing extensions that cause direct damage (including damage to third parties). There is a subtle but important difference between blocking content and generating fake user interaction.
[...] Because this extension causes direct and indirect economic damage to website owners, it is classified as malware, and as such blocked.
From the forum threads this decision has been slightly controversial with some users.
If you're not familiar with Pale Moon, it is an Open Source web browser, forked from a mature Mozilla code release, and has been covered on SN before.
[Update: Added text re: blocking level; bolded text that was bold in the original posting. --martyb]
(Score: 2) by edIII on Tuesday August 29 2017, @12:48AM
That's no longer true with some of the newer platforms. It's not about delivering pages through a hierarchy of files and directories, but more of an API used in some sort of MVC.
One of the projects I worked on the url was literally turned into functions. /ping /grep /ls or /ping?ip=127.0.0.1 (I don't mean those commands literally, but just an example)
In those cases your not traversing directory structure anymore, but API structure instead. With posted API requests and nothing on the URL line. Work on the site for three hours and the URL never changes. Not even an additional page load.
Technically, lunchtime is at any moment. It's just a wave function.