In the new year, Firefox will be hiding notification pop-ups by default with their new Firefox 72 release in an effort to fight spam.

In the new year, Firefox will be hiding notification pop-ups by default with their new Firefox 72 release in an effort to fight spam.
2020 Cybersecurity Landscape: 100+ Experts’ Predictions
Cyber Security Predictions 2021: Experts’ Responses
Experts’ Responses: Cyber Security Predictions 2023
Data Privacy Protection Day (Thursday 28th) – Experts Comments
Experts Insight On US Pipeline Shut After Cyberattack
Information Security Buzz (aka ISBuzz News) is an independent resource that provides the experts comments, analysis and opinion on the latest Information Security news and topics
Pop-ups were a good idea until they weren’t. While developed for good intentions, pop-ups have become a widely abused website feature that now enable low-quality ads and malware attacks. Most users now avoid them by blocking them altogether, a move that renders useless those designed to offer useful notifications or show quality ads. In fact, surveys consistently show that consumers don’t mind pop-ups when they’re relevant and unobtrusive. The backlash has been building up over the past several years’ mounting abuse by bad actors on the one hand and, on the other, digital ad supply chain players who pay little to no attention to user experience. Intrusive pop-ups are just one among many contributors to deteriorating user experience. The question players along the digital supply chain must answer is whether and, if so, how they plan to change their tactics to entice engagement while responding to consumers’ growing demand for privacy and security. If they fail to respond, the internet will cease to be free and when that happens businesses and consumers will stand to lose.