08 January 20, 10:51
Quote:Continue Reading
Mozilla Firefox 72.0 was released yesterday and one of the changes in the release was that it toned down web notification requests. Now it is Google's turn with something similar. From Chrome 80 onward, Chrome (and other Chromium-based browsers such as Vivaldi or Opera), Chrome users on the desktop and on mobile will experience less disruptions when it comes to notification requests.
Google plans to enable the quieter notifications feature automatically in certain cases but users of the web browser may also enable it manually directly.
As far as automatic enrollment is concerned, this happens under the following two conditions:
1. Users who deny notification requests frequently -- Google does not reveal details -- will be enrolled automatically to make notification requests less obnoxious.
2. Google will enroll users automatically if a site has a low engagement score.
Manual Option
Note: the change lands in Chrome 80 (the next stable version of Chrome scheduled for February 4, 2020) and is not available in previous versions. Chrome users who run development versions may enable the flag chrome://flags/#quiet-notification-prompts to make use of the feature right now.
Chrome users may furthermore enable the new feature manually in the following way:
1. Load chrome://settings/content/notifications in the browser's address bar. You may alternatively navigate to Menu > Settings > Advanced > Site Settings > Notifications.
2. If "sites can ask to send notifications" is enabled, the new option "use quieter messaging (blocks notification prompts from interrupting you)" can be enabled.
Chrome users who have disabled notifications completely don't need to do anything here. Those who have kept the option enabled can check the option to reduce the number of notification prompts.
Chrome displays "Notifications blocked" in the address bar for a brief moment and replaces the text with a bell icon that is crossed out.
A click on the text or the icon displays a prompt; it is not the notification prompt of the site. Instead, Chrome displays information that notification requests and notifications are blocked on the site.
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