![]() On the brighter side, though, a handy tweak exists through which you could stop this back button’s redirection on the Chrome browser. They can bypass the restrictions put in place by the Chromium source code and hence could still hijack the browser’s back button. ![]() ![]() However, some sites seem to have found a workaround. If it finds out that the site had carried that navigation without the user’s consent, then it would skip that site altogether, and you would be taken back to the earlier site (which in our case was Site ‘A’). It will first check for user involvement before every navigation. ![]() In this regard, the Chromium developers have rolled out an update that would effectively prevent sites from carrying out either redirection or the execution of the PushState Command. All these results in your few (unintentional) extra seconds of interaction with that site which ultimately translates to an upscale in the trajectory of their income. ![]()
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