> If it kills a business model that's based on intrusive user-tracking and the user being totally unable to know who has their data and who their computer should vs shouldn't be connecting to - great.
What are you talking about? You can always block whatever you want, and we're not talking about "intrusive user-tracking" here but literally just an IP address. You can have the opinion that websites shouldn't use third-party resources, but legislating that requirement is beyond ridiculous.
There are countless good reasons for using third-party resources on websites, and disallowing it will absolutely make the web a worse place regardless of any "privacy" benefits it could have.
What are you talking about? You can always block whatever you want, and we're not talking about "intrusive user-tracking" here but literally just an IP address. You can have the opinion that websites shouldn't use third-party resources, but legislating that requirement is beyond ridiculous.
There are countless good reasons for using third-party resources on websites, and disallowing it will absolutely make the web a worse place regardless of any "privacy" benefits it could have.