I’m genuinely shocked that Jake thinks that Chrome hiding URLs is a good thing. On the one hand, he says:
The URL is the share button of the web, and it does that better than any other platform. Linkability and shareability is key to the web, we must never lose that…
I absolutely agree with him there. But I very much disagree when he says:
…and these changes do not lose that.
The method he describes for getting at a URL to share is this:
clicking the origin chip or hitting ⌘-L.
Your average user is no more likely to figure out how to do that then they are to figure out how to view source (something that Chrome buried as a “developer” feature some time ago).
Cennydd recently said of URLs:
And I don’t agree that good URLs are beautiful. Even those are an alphabet soup of slashes, dots, two-letter countries, and no spaces.
— Cennydd Bowles (@Cennydd) May 1, 2014
I mostly agree with him. The protocol portion of the URL is pretty pointless, and the domain name and TLD are never what I would describe as “beautiful”. No, when I talk about beautiful URLs, I mean the path that comes after the protocol, domain name, and TLD gumpf …the very bit that Chrome is looking to hide.
URLs are universal. They work in Firefox, Chrome, Safari, Internet Explorer, cURL, wget, your iPhone, Android and even written down on sticky notes. They are the one universal syntax of the web. Don’t take that for granted.
URLs are for humans. Design them for humans.
Of course your average user probably won’t even know what a URL is, and nor should they. But they know what a link is. They know that, until now, they could copy the “link” from the top of their browser and paste it into an email, or a text message, or a word processing document.
If this Chrome experiment goes forward, we can kiss all that goodbye.
The security issue that Jake outlines is that browsers need to make the domain name portion of the URL clearly visible. I hope that the smart folks working on Chrome can figure out a way to do that without castrating the browser’s ability to easily share links.
It’s a classic case of:
- Something must be done!
- This (killing URLs) is something.
- Something has been done.
Technically, obfuscating the URL seems to solve the security issue. But technically, decapitation seems to solve a headache.
3 Likes
# Liked by Ariel Waldman on Tuesday, May 27th, 2014 at 9:35pm
# Liked by Maria Matveeva on Tuesday, May 27th, 2014 at 9:36pm
# Liked by Valeria Brigatti on Tuesday, May 27th, 2014 at 9:36pm