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Hover a mouse over a link – just don't trust the results (michaelhorowitz.com)
12 points by phr4ts on Feb 17, 2020 | hide | past | favorite | 9 comments



It's remarkable how many user-hostile annoyances and dark patterns of web design have gone mainstream.

Designers seem to have learned the wrong lessons. If users are blocking your pop-up windows (or other annoying features like autoplaying video) the proper response is to design your web site to work properly without the irritating features, not to come up with a new way of invoking them that works even in the face of powerful blocking mechanisms and user opposition.


One more reason for right click -> open in a new tab (on desktop). It's a surprisingly simple and effective solution. Edit: copy/paste link location also gets rid of the unwanted Javascript destination and should be safe.

The websites I really can't stand are the ones featuring href="#", only relying on Javascript for links.


I always right click->copy and put it in the url for a new tab before deciding.


Google does this for its search results. Hovering the cursor over it shows the actual URL of the result, but whenever it detects an onclick event it replaces it by its own tracking URL. Super annoying when trying to copy an URL - luckily you can easily get rid of it through user.js.


It is extremely annoying. When I do a web search, I want real URLs, not obfuscated tracking links, but search engines seem to have collectively decided to sabotage their own search results.

Even if you are addicted to tracking (and assuming that tracking is a good thing that users actually want) surely there is a way to do it without sabotaging URLs.


Another reason to use DuckDuckGo...


Just one of many reasons you should block js by default, and push back (usually by just leaving) sites that show blank pages without it.


a lot of "blank pages" yield a readable article if you click reader mode.


On Firefox (Linux), middle-clicking opens a new tab to the site indicated, not the malicious one.




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