Matching Firefox behavior likely means that we won't have to worry about breaking sites. We may have to worry about breaking Chrome Extensions or other browser-specific content.
-Darin On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 1:31 AM, Jochen Eisinger <joc...@chromium.org> wrote: > Hey, > > Firefox restricts the use of window.blur() and window.focus() (by > default). window.blur() is just doing nothing, and window.focus() only > works if the caller is running in the same window. > > Should we implement similar rules for WebKit? The purpose of this is to > make pop-unders more difficult to achieve. > > I think this can be implemented in such a way the the chrome > implementation which is doing the actual focusing/bluring anyway has enough > information to let each port control what they want to do. > > wdyt? > > -jochen > > _______________________________________________ > webkit-dev mailing list > webkit-dev@lists.webkit.org > http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev > >
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