Annoying website notification will be blocked or hide by default in Google Chrome.........

Chrome will soon hide those annoying website notification requests

Pop-ups are often a thing of the past, but ask for the latest annoyance notifications when surfing the Internet. These are small fields asking if users want to be notified of updates even after leaving the site. Although some sites offer a large stream of content that you don’t want to skip (hmm, Android Author), most users don’t care, do not reject or ignore each time they open notification requests. This is quickly becoming obsolete, as many sites want to visit again and again.

Fortunately, the upcoming Chrome 80 update will elegantly fix this issue. Instead of displaying all notifications, Chrome on desktop and mobile devices can automatically hide browsers, showing a short notification that notifications are blocked.

As you can see above, the results are less invasive, but allow users to trigger notifications with a single click or click. A blue box will appear to help users easily use the new user interface component when this feature was recently released.

This gain setting is enabled by default, but you can enable it with the new silent noise option in the settings menu. So that users often reject notifications (read all), quieter messages will open automatically after constantly updating the update on Chrome.

Silent_messaging_notifications_chrome

Silent messages open automatically for users who often decline requests.
The Chrome team will take another step towards the end of this year, when Google will allow the additional deployment of malicious websites that use web beacons for advertising, malware or phishing. ,

This option is currently available on Chrome Beta, Developer, and Canary (via 9to5Google) and can be enabled using chrome: // flags / # quiet-notify-prompt flag. The Chromium official weblog for web developers who want to avoid being permanently hidden also describes some of the best ways to increase user acceptance.

In addition, Chrome will soon add the Game of the Day feature, which allows users to play their favorite mini-games from previous Google Doodles (also through 9to5Google). It appears on the Chrome homepage on various Dev and Canary channels on Android. There is no word in wider distribution.
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