![]() The feature won't be made available to everyone, however: The ticket explains that the company will be running AB testing for three weeks, in which 50 percent of users will receive ad blocking while the other 50 percent won't. ![]() The leaked plan comes courtesy of Bleeping Computer, which was the first to spot a bug-tracking ticket which claims that Mozilla is ' introducing an Ad Blocking feature in Focus 9.0,' due for release in February. Now, Mozilla appears to be working on adding on-by-default ad blocking of its own, but starting with its mobile-centric Firefox Focus browser rather than its desktop equivalent. Rather than blocking everything, however, the feature - which recently announced it will roll out internationally - only blocks adverts which breach the rules of the Coalition for Better Ads, with Google's own advertising naturally coming down on the correct side of the fence in order to remain visible. Mozilla may be looking to follow rival Google into the ad-blocking business, according to a bug-tracking ticket which appears to discuss new functionality due for testing in the next release of its mobile-centric Firefox Focus browser.Īfter launching development efforts in 2017, Google - whose parent company Alphabet makes the overwhelming majority of its revenue from advertising - made the controversial decision to create an on-by-default ad blocking in its popular Chrome web browser.
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