* The document is in the replacement encoding (i.e. * The document is in one of the UTF-16 encodings. * The document isn't text/plain or text/html (it's instead some flavor of XML) The menu is disabled if any of the following is true: Specifically, telemetry showed that when people used the menu, very often they were using the menu a second time on the same page, i.e. (Before the current behavior of the menu, we gathered telemetry that indicated that people didn't have a good idea of when they should use the menu and what to choose from it. Why and under what conditions is it disabled?ġ) Disable it in situation where enticing the user to use the menu could be part of an XSS attack.Ģ) Avoid a situation where the user changes the browser state such that the browser submits data in the wrong encoding to the site such that the wrongly-encoded data ends up in a database or similar.ģ) Avoid offering the user the opportunity to waste time doing something that's not going to help them. > I wonder if someone can explain the rationale behind disabling View > Text (In reply to David Spector from comment #4)
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