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Safari’s new ‘Distraction Control’ feature lets you hide annoying cookie pop-ups
Karlston posted a news in Security & Privacy News
You’ll be able to tap parts of a website that you want to remove. The feature is available in the newest iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia developer betas. Apple is adding a new feature to Safari called “Distraction Control” that lets you remove distracting things like cookie preference pop-ups while you’re browsing, MacRumors reports. The new feature is available with the fifth iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia developer betas that launched on Monday. You can get an idea of how Distraction Control works thanks to a video from MacRumors. From a menu, you can choose an option to “Hide Distracting Items” and then select items you want to hide from the page you’re looking at. When items are hidden, they dissipate away with a very slick animation. In a pop-up shown in the video, Apple notes that “hiding distracting items will not permanently remove ads and other content that updates frequently,” so you won’t be able to use this feature to hide every ad you see for good. Parts of a website that you hide also don’t sync across your devices, MacRumors says. The new iOS 18 beta also brings changes to the redesigned Photos app, including removing the new carousel view feature. Source Hope you enjoyed this news post. Thank you for appreciating my time and effort posting news every single day for many years. 2023: Over 5,800 news posts | 2024 (till end of July): 3,313 news posts -
Apple introduces built-in content blocker for Safari called 'Distraction Control'
Karlston posted a news in Security & Privacy News
Apple today released the latest preview versions of its operating systems, and one of the most interesting changes arrived for Safari, Apple's default web browser. It now has a built-in content blocker called "Distraction Control." Unlike traditional content blockers that remove ads, Apple's approach is more careful. As the name implies, the feature tries to eliminate various web annoyances, such as newsletter signups (that thing that dims the entire screen and begs for your email two and a half seconds after you load the website), cookie prompts, autoplaying videos, and other irritations. Although you can use Distraction Control to block ads, they return once you refresh the page, clearly indicating that Apple is not trying to substitute third-party ad blockers. Safari will even warn you that Distraction Control cannot permanently remove ads. In a nutshell, Apple is giving iOS, iPadOS, and macOS users a quick and easy tool to hide distracting elements when visiting websites. Another important aspect is that hiding certain parts of a website requires action from the end user, so the process is not automatic, and it won't sync across devices. You have to invoke the feature from the menu and manually select the element you want to remove. If that sounds like too much work, Apple users can always get a third-party ad blocker that would automate the process. Distraction Control is now available in the latest iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia developer betas. It is expected to arrive in the next public beta and land alongside the stable releases in the next month or two. Source Hope you enjoyed this news post. Thank you for appreciating my time and effort posting news every single day for many years. 2023: Over 5,800 news posts | 2024 (till end of July): 3,313 news posts