With hundreds of millions of people using over 250,000 items in the
    Chrome Web Store, extensions have become essential to how many of us
    experience the web and get work done online. We believe extensions must
    be trustworthy by default, which is why we’ve spent this year
    
    making extensions safer for everyone.
  
  
    Today we’re officially announcing the planned rollout of Manifest V3 for
    Chrome Extensions, a new version of the extensions platform that makes
    extensions more secure, performant, and private-respecting by default.
  
  Security
  
    With the introduction of Manifest V3, we will disallow remotely hosted
    code. This mechanism is used as an attack vector by bad actors to
    circumvent Google’s malware detection tools and poses a significant
    risk to user privacy and security.
  
  
    The removal of remotely hosted code will also allow us to more thoroughly
    and quickly review submissions to the Chrome Web Store. Developers will
    then be able to release updates to their users more quickly.
  
  
    On the extensions team, we believe that a trustworthy Chrome and a
    trustworthy extensions experience is not only great for users but is
    also essential for developers. In the long run, Manifest V3 will help the
    extension ecosystem continue to be a place that people can trust.
  
  Performance
  
    We know that performance is key to a great user experience, and as we
    began work on the third iteration of our extension platform, performance
    was a foundational consideration. Two areas where this has manifested
    are our approach to background logic and API design.
  
  
    First, we are introducing
    service workers
    as a replacement for background pages. Unlike persistent background
    pages, which remain active in the background and consume system resources
    regardless of whether the extension is actively using them, service
    workers are ephemeral. This ephemerality allows Chrome to lower overall
    system resource utilization since the browser can start up and tear
    down service workers as needed.
  
  
    Second, we are moving to a more declarative model for extension APIs in
    general. In addition to security benefits,
    
    this provides a more reliable end-user performance guarantee
    across the board by eliminating the need for serialization and
    inter-process communication. The end result is better overall performance
    and improved privacy guarantees for the vast majority of extension
    users.
  
  Privacy
  
    To give users greater visibility and control over how extensions use
    and share their data, we’re moving to an extensions model that makes
    more permissions optional and allows users to withhold sensitive
    permissions at install time. Long-term, extension developers should
    expect users to opt in or out of permissions at any time.
  
  
    For extensions that currently require passive access to web activity,
    we’re introducing and continuing to iterate on new functionality that
    allows developers to deliver these use cases while preserving user
    privacy. For example, our new declarativeNetRequest API is designed
    to be a privacy-preserving method for extensions to block network
    requests without needing access to sensitive data.
  
  
    The declarativeNetRequest API is an example of how Chrome is working to
    enable extensions, including ad blockers, to continue delivering their
    core functionality without requiring the extension to have access to
    potentially sensitive user data. This will allow many of the powerful
    extensions in our ecosystem to continue to provide a seamless user
    experience while still respecting user privacy.
  
  Availability & Continued Iteration
  
    When the Manifest V3 draft proposal was initially shared with the
    Chromium developer community, we received an abundance of helpful
    feedback — thank you!  We have been working closely with the developers
    of many extensions — including ad blockers, shopping extensions,
    productivity enhancements, developer tools, and more — to evolve the
    platform.
  
  
    We've used this feedback to improve the functionality and usability of
    the API surfaces associated with Manifest V3. For example, we have added
    support to declarativeNetRequest for multiple static rulesets, regular
    expressions within rules, declarative header modification, and more.
  
  
    “We’ve been very pleased with the close collaboration established
    between Google’s Chrome Extensions Team and our own engineering team
    to ensure that ad-blocking extensions will still be available after
    Manifest V3 takes effect."
    
    — Sofia Lindberg, Tech Lead, eyeo (Adblock Plus)
  
  
    Even after Manifest V3 launches, expect more functionality and iteration
    as we continue to incorporate feedback and add new features to make V3
    even more powerful for developers while preserving user privacy. If
    you are interested in contributing to the conversation, please comment
    and discuss on the
    chromium-extensions Google Group.
  
  
    Manifest V3 is now available to experiment with on Chrome 88 Beta, with
    additional exciting features to follow in upcoming releases. The
    Chrome Web Store will start accepting Manifest V3 extensions January, shortly after Chrome 88 reaches stable. While there is not an exact date for
    removing support for Manifest V2 extensions, developers can expect the
    migration period to last at least a year from when Manifest V3 lands in
    the stable channel. We will continue to provide more details about
    this timeline in the coming months.
  
  
    Posted by David Li - Product Manager, Chrome
    & Simeon Vincent - Developer Advocate, Chrome