DIGITAL LIFE

Google Chrome and the dictatorship of ads: the end of the line for traditional Ad Blockers
If you're one of those users who can't live without a clean internet free of annoying ads, we have bad news. Google has finally decided to deliver the coup de grâce to the traditional ad blockers we use daily in its browser.
The controversial transition to the new Manifest V3 architecture has been announced for years, but now the company has begun ruthlessly disabling extensions based on the old system. This means your browsing experience is about to change drastically.
The official justification from the search giant focuses on the privacy and security of the entire ecosystem, but the tech community has little doubt. For most experts, the real reason for this move is to shield and protect its billion-dollar online advertising empire.
To understand the magnitude of this resource cut, Manifest V3 fundamentally changes how extensions interact with your browser. By drastically limiting network rules and dynamic filtering, powerful and complex blockers, such as the famous uBlock Origin, simply cease to operate at their full potential.
It's frustrating, to say the least, to see Google using the pretext of security to crush tools that users legitimately installed to protect their own privacy. With this change to the codebase, the effective interception of network requests – the real magic behind blocking aggressive ads on YouTube or Twitch – becomes an almost impossible task to accomplish in Chrome.
What Google took away and why it took it...The technical change is the replacement of Chrome’s webRequest API with the declarativeNetRequest API.
Under the old system, extensions like uBlock Origin could watch your browser’s traffic as it happened, see an ad or tracker trying to load, and block it on the spot before it ever reached your screen.
Under the new system, extensions have to hand Google a pre-written list of things to block and Chrome decides whether to follow those instructions. The lists are capped at a fixed number of rules, and the extension can’t react to anything that isn’t already on the list.
uBlock Origin’s developer, Raymond Hill, has been clear that a Manifest V3 version cannot replicate the original’s full capabilities. A stripped-down version called uBlock Origin Lite exists for MV3, but it handles only a fraction of the filter lists, the community-maintained databases of known ads and trackers, that the original supported.
It also can’t perform cosmetic filtering, the process of hiding ad containers and promotional elements that remain on a page even after the ad itself is blocked. Without it, you get blank boxes where ads used to be, or sponsored content that looks native to the page. For more than 40 million Chrome users who relied on the original, the replacement is a downgrade by design.
Google engineer Devlin Cronin confirmed the timeline in a Chromium code review commit, a logged change to Chrome’s underlying source code that other developers can inspect, writing that “MV2 extensions are no longer allowed in any supported version of Chrome, and we are removing support for them and the associated functionality. We won’t be able to provide / maintain this functionality indefinitely due to the complexity and tech debt, as well as the security risks it entails (we’ve actually found a number of bugs that are specific to MV2 lately). Of course, other browsers can continue supporting these if they so desire.”
Cronin’s sign-off, that “other browsers can continue supporting these if they so desire,” suggests the removal as a Chrome-specific choice. It isn’t. Google controls 65% of the desktop browser market and the MV2 code being stripped from Chromium, the open-source project that Chrome and many other browsers are built on top of, affects every browser that shares that foundation.
Google justifies the migration on security grounds and there’s some substance to the argument. The old webRequest API gives extensions deep access to every network request a browser makes, from images and page loads to login credentials, and the extension sees the data before Chrome acts on it.
A compromised or malicious extension with that access can read your passwords as you type them, redirect you to fake websites, or slip harmful code into pages you trust.
The declarativeNetRequest API is designed to prevent exactly this kind of attack by restricting extensions to predefined rule sets. Instead of giving an extension free rein over your browser traffic, Chrome only lets it submit a list of instructions in advance and handles the blocking itself. That narrows the ways a bad actor can exploit an extension because the extension never gets to touch your data directly.
But Google generated roughly $239.5 billion in advertising revenue in 2025, and content blockers directly reduce the number of ads users see. The MV3 restrictions don’t ban ad blocking entirely. They cap how many rules an extension can use and eliminate dynamic blocking, the ability to recognize and stop new ad formats and trackers as they appear in real time.
Ad companies constantly change how they deliver ads, rotating domains and disguising tracking scripts, and the old extensions could keep up with that. The new ones can only block what’s already on a list that was written before the ad loaded. The result is ad blockers that work against yesterday’s ads but struggle against the ones that adapt daily.
The same company that built Chrome and sells the ads it displays also wrote the rules governing what ad blockers can do inside it. Whether those incentives shaped MV3’s design is the most obvious question in the room, and Google has never given a convincing answer.
Microsoft Edge and Opera, both built on Google’s Chromium engine, are expected to follow suit because the MV2 code being removed is shared across all Chromium-based browsers. Maintaining it independently would require significant engineering resources that most of those browsers are unlikely to commit.
Brave, also Chromium-based, supports MV2 but also sidesteps the problem by building its own ad-blocking engine directly into the browser, bypassing the extension framework entirely.
Firefox, which runs on its own engine, continues to support Manifest V2 and uBlock Origin without restriction. Mozilla implemented its own version of Manifest V3 but kept the old webRequest API working alongside it, so extensions that need real-time traffic access can still use it. That proves security improvements and effective content blocking can coexist. Google chose not to make them coexist.
What you can do...For Chrome users who want effective content blocking, the options are leaving Chrome or accepting reduced protection.
Firefox supports uBlock Origin in full and shows no signs of changing that. Brave blocks ads natively. Both are free and work well, and switching takes about ten minutes.
You can also install uBlock Origin Lite on Chrome and accept that it blocks less, adapts more slowly to new threats and can’t match the original. Or you can do nothing, and Chrome 150 will disable the extension through a routine update and show you a notification that it’s no longer supported.
Your current alternatives and solutions...With the forced deactivation of Manifest V2 in the stable version of Chrome, you can't simply ignore the problem. You'll have to make some firm decisions about the software you use to browse the internet if you want to keep your sanity intact and your screen free of visual distractions.
The transition requires you to take immediate action to avoid being inundated with intrusive advertising. Fortunately, the development community hasn't thrown in the towel and has already begun preparing concrete answers and alternative paths to mitigate this genuine technological headache.
To help you navigate this new and grim reality, we've compiled the main options available to you to circumvent these severe restrictions:
Install uBlock Origin Lite, a version officially adapted to Manifest V3, although considerably less effective on video platforms.
Transfer to tools like AdGuard or Blockify, which have already been rewritten from scratch and optimized for this new imposed architecture.
Switch to Brave, which offers a robust native shield against ads without relying on external extensions at all.
Adopt Firefox as your main browser, as Mozilla has already promised to maintain continuous and lifetime support for the full version of uBlock Origin.
Regardless of the path you choose, it's clear that Google's absolute dominance over the Chromium engine has given it total power to dictate the rules in its favor. Now we must wait patiently to see if this controversial stance will ultimately motivate a significant exodus of users to rival, more open and free ecosystems.




