Switch to Firefox.

Edit: Google have now ditched WEI, but this still shows why it's important to have competition in the browser space.

@Lumpbucket Can someone explain in a way that is understandable and practical to the general population what Web Integrity is? I just checked and all the articles sound like gibberish to me.
@kohane @Lumpbucket It would mean that a website can verify if you're seeing exactly what the page owner sent. That means: ad blocking, cookie blocking, any customisations, any client-side accessibility fixes, any non-mainstream browsers, any non-mainstream operating systems will be rejected.
That would start from Google search results ensuring you're seeing the ads, but quickly would move to any payment page, banking sites, any ad-supported site, etc.
@viraptor @Lumpbucket What if I'm using some another browser? Like Safari, Opera or Firefox? What happens in that case?
@kohane @viraptor safari might be OK. Opera is based on Chromium, so you're relying on Opera to specifically strip it out.
@Lumpbucket @kohane yup, Firefox is a nice example and easy to migrate to in most cases. But anything not based on Chromium, or actively disabling WEI is a great statement / a vote at this point.