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After 3 Years of Work, Chrome Killed My Extension and Won’t Tell Me Why

medium.com

46 points by mikob 6 years ago · 7 comments

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thephyber 6 years ago

{Google, Apple, Steam, etc} all do this with their walled gardens. It's sad, but it's not unique.

Perhaps if there were way to make the rules more programmatic and less ambiguous, these might be easier to resolve (like writing code to fulfill unit tests). But I suppose it probably still gets evaluated by humans on a subjective judgement, even if there is an objective rubric for most of the requirements.

  • EricE 6 years ago

    Initially I was a fan of the curation approach, particularly for Apple and iOS since it was a new platform. Sadly, it's obvious that none of them can keep up with all the reasonable edge cases. Curation just doesn't scale and I don't see AI/ML or anything else closing the gap any time soon.

thro1 6 years ago

This made me even more depressive.

I stopped developing browser extensions when Mozilla killed their only competitive advantage over Google and allowed Webextensions only.

anon4reasons 6 years ago

This happened to me as well, and my extension was quite popular and very lucrative.

What I ended up doing was uploading it to the store under a new category and hoped it would be reevaluated under different people or constraints and it worked. Has been up and running for over a year.

fortyseven 6 years ago

And this is why I stopped developing for Google's platforms. Extensions? Android? Forget it. Been abused by their rancid practices too many times, and heard too many similar horror stories. Not worth it.

indigodaddy 6 years ago

Surprised this got no comment traction. This is outrageous. Why on earth can’t Google just identify the exact infraction? Absolutely ridiculous.

jackandamydev 6 years ago

What rejection message ae ou receiving? Maybe I can help Amy

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