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Google’s phasing out uBlock Origin on Chrome with Manifest V3

Chrome’s Manifest V3 update axes uBlock Origin, leaving users with a weaker Lite version.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 4, 2025, 3:54 AM EST
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The image shows the Google Chrome logo centered against a light blue background with a subtle wavy pattern. The Chrome logo features its distinctive circular design with four colored sections: red at the top, yellow on the right, green on the left, and a blue circle in the center. The background has a soft, flowing water-like texture that gives the image a serene, ethereal quality.
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If you’re cruising the internet, blissfully ad-free, thanks to your trusty uBlock Origin extension keeping pop-ups and banner ads at bay. Then, one day, you open Chrome and see a little notification nudging you to ditch the very tool that’s been your digital shield. For a growing number of Chrome users, this isn’t a hypothetical—it’s the reality of Google’s latest move to phase out the original uBlock Origin ad blocker, along with a slew of other extensions that don’t fit its new Manifest V3 framework.

Google’s been tinkering under Chrome’s hood for a while now, pushing what it calls a necessary upgrade for privacy and security. Manifest V3, the new extension specification, is the tech giant’s big plan to modernize how browser add-ons work. Sounds good on paper, right? Except there’s a catch: it yanks out a key feature—webRequest API—that uBlock Origin and other hardcore ad blockers leaned on to scrub the internet clean of ads. The result? A watered-down ad-blocking experience that’s left users grumbling and, in some cases, eyeing the exit.

The purge didn’t happen overnight. Google kicked things off back in October 2024, but the ripple effects are hitting harder now, in early March 2025. Users on Reddit and X have been buzzing about it—posts popping up with screenshots of Chrome’s polite but firm breakup letter: “This extension is no longer supported.” Under the extensions tab, a little window slides in, explaining that your favorite add-on’s been turned off. You’ve got two choices: hit “Remove” and wave goodbye, or “Manage” it and cling to the nostalgia a bit longer.

Tech site Bleeping Computer chimed in, reporting that even their own staffers’ devices are feeling the sting—extensions flipping off like light switches. And it’s not just uBlock Origin in the crosshairs. Any extension still running on the old Manifest V2 spec is getting the boot unless it’s been updated to play nice with V3. For uBlock Origin fans, there’s a lifeline: uBlock Origin Lite. It’s the V3-compliant cousin, but don’t get too excited—it’s more like a lite beer version of the original. Less potent, fewer features, and a lot less satisfying for power users who loved the granular control of the full-fat edition.

Why’s this happening?

Google’s reasoning is straightforward, if a bit clinical. Manifest V3 is supposed to tighten up security and give users more control over what extensions can poke around in their browsing data. The old webRequest API let extensions like uBlock Origin peek at every bit of traffic flowing through your browser—a superpower for blocking ads, sure, but also a potential privacy risk if a shady add-on got its hands on it. V3 swaps that out for a new system, declarativeNetRequest, which limits extensions to a pre-set list of rules—capping out at 30,000 for static filters, a far cry from the dynamic, limitless blocking uBlock Origin could pull off.

Critics, though, see a bigger game at play. Google’s a company built on ads, after all—its revenue stream depends on those little rectangles flickering across your screen. Nerfing ad blockers could be a sneaky way to keep the cash flowing, even if Google swears it’s all about safety. Raymond Hill, the brain behind uBlock Origin, hasn’t minced words about it. He’s called V3 a downgrade for ad-blocking extensions, and he’s not alone in feeling that Google’s forcing users to pick between security and a truly ad-free internet.

Chrome’s not the only one caught up in this shift. The Chromium engine powers a bunch of other browsers—think Microsoft Edge and even privacy-focused Brave—and they’re all along for the ride. Edge is losing V2 support right alongside Chrome, while Brave’s promised “limited” compatibility for older extensions once the Chrome Web Store officially pulls the plug on Manifest V2 goodies. That deadline’s been creeping closer, and as of now, it’s looking like a full V2 blackout is imminent.

Then there’s Mozilla, playing the contrarian card. Firefox, which runs on its own Gecko engine, isn’t bowing to the V3-only trend. Mozilla’s doubling down, saying it’ll keep supporting both Manifest V2 and V3 extensions for the foreseeable future. For uBlock Origin diehards, that’s a beacon of hope—a browser where the original ad-blocking champ can still flex its muscles without compromise.

For now, Chrome users are stuck in a weird limbo. If you’re still clinging to uBlock Origin, enjoy it while it lasts—Google’s not turning back. Switching to uBlock Origin Lite is the path of least resistance, but if you’re the type who hates compromise, Firefox is waving from across the browser battlefield. Brave’s an option too, though its V2 support is on borrowed time.

Google’s framing this as a win for the future—a safer, sleeker Chrome. But for the millions who’ve relied on uBlock Origin to keep the internet tolerable, it feels more like a bait-and-switch. The Manifest V3 era’s here, whether we like it or not, and it’s forcing a choice: adapt to Google’s rules or find a new digital home.


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