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Don Marti from CafeMedia brought to our attention that individuals relying on legacy web servers, shared hosting, or a variety of other hosting plans who want to add their proposed First-Party Set to the Github repository at github.com/GoogleChrome/first-party-sets may have difficulty serving an extensionless JSON file such as the currently required .well-known/first-party-set.
Currently, adding a .json extension to the name of the file would cause their First-Party Set to fail the checks on the repository, putting these individuals at a disadvantage. The requirements should be modified so that FPS submitters must have their sites' JSON files served at .well-known/first-party-set.json so that all submitters can more easily pass the checks.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
This seems like a reasonable change to make; ideally in advance of accepting new "live" submissions intended to be applied to Chrome M113+ (which is the milestone we hope to ship FPS in Chrome).
My comment was based on a related issue, from the Global Privacy Control site: w3c/gpc#9 (The IAB's sellers.json file requires less web server admin work to support)
Don Marti from CafeMedia brought to our attention that individuals relying on legacy web servers, shared hosting, or a variety of other hosting plans who want to add their proposed First-Party Set to the Github repository at github.com/GoogleChrome/first-party-sets may have difficulty serving an extensionless JSON file such as the currently required
.well-known/first-party-set
.Currently, adding a .json extension to the name of the file would cause their First-Party Set to fail the checks on the repository, putting these individuals at a disadvantage. The requirements should be modified so that FPS submitters must have their sites' JSON files served at
.well-known/first-party-set.json
so that all submitters can more easily pass the checks.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: