My name is Filipe Pereira and I'm VP of Engineering at Jscrambler (www.jscrambler.com
). We have recently been informed by our customers that one of our products is being blocked by the Brave browser and some ad blockers, which have in common the use of easyprivacy list (https://easylist.to/easylist/easyprivacy.txt) from easylist (https://easylist.to/), namely the following entries:
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ele26126.jscrambler.com^
klm-ea.jscrambler.com^
We understand the intent of these lists, but our product is not tracking users data (personal or otherwise). In fact, we are contributing to privacy as our product provides data isolation to web forms, preventing data entered by users from being collected by unauthorized code (i.e. third-party) without the application owner's knowledge. Please check https://jscrambler.com/solutions/user-data-protection-compliance
for further details.
The way our solution works, we rely on a script that needs to be loaded by the browser, in order to offer the shielding of the form. We, however, do not collect or store any data made available by the user or the website - which we can prove.
So, we actually say that users' data is safer with our solution running.
That being said, we wonder how we got on the list. Technically, we need to intercept script accesses to forms, to be able to control whether they should be given access. Perhaps that was misinterpreted as an attempt to collect data. Or perhaps some third party requested our inclusion on the list.
Regardless of the reason, we would like to respectfully request our removal from the list (namely, the two entries above).
We are more than happy to provide further details or explanations if needed, including jumping on a call.