Mozilla, the maker of the Open Source browser Firefox, is adding a new “auto-play blocking” feature to the search engine for desktop and Android users to block audible audio and video playbacks by default. The feature would come as part of “Firefox 66” which is scheduled for general release on March 19. Also Read - Microsoft Edge and Internet Explorer will not support Flash by end of this year
“Any playback that happens before the user has interacted with a page via a mouse click, printable key press, or touch event, is deemed to be autoplay and will be blocked if it is potentially audible,” Chris Pearce, Engineer, Mozilla wrote in a blog-post on Monday. Also Read - Mozilla extends deal to use Google Search as default on Firefox browser
However, Firefox would allow users to opt-in for the “autoplay sound” permission from the default setting of “Block” to “Allow” for certain websites where users prefer the audible autoplay of audio and video to be allowed. Also Read - Microsoft Edge now the second most popular web browser, says study
“We are also allowing sites to autoplay audibly if the user has previously granted them camera or microphone permission, so that sites which have explicit user permission continue to work as they do today.”
Google, Microsoft and Apple have also added provisions to limit and mute auto-playing media on Chrome, Edge and Safari browsers, respectively. Last year Mozilla announced that Firefox would no longer support auto-playing audio on the browser in a bid to crub advertisements.
“At this time, we’re also working on blocking autoplay for Web Audio content, but have not yet finalised our implementation but expect to ship the feature sometime in 2019,” Pearce noted.