> So Mozilla is making it harder for end users to find and kill service workers?
about:serviceworkers was added as a hacky debugging/introspection tool with the expectation that the developer tools team would integrate the functionality into more full-featured, supported tooling. about:debugging is that tooling.
For example, about:debugging's "Workers" tab (on nightly):
- Displays all registered Service Workers as well as whether they are stopped, enables starting them if desired, and attaching a debugger to them.
- Also displays any open (Dedicated DOM) Worker instances as well as SharedWorker instances and provides debugging support.
- Listens for changes and updates the UI in real-time covering whether the ServiceWorker is stopped/running/installing/etc. (about:serviceworkers renders in a single snapshot).
I'm parsing your underlying concern to be that ServiceWorkers are a powerful new capability for websites and that you want to make sure they're not being brushed under the rug as a "don't worry about it, nothing could possi-blye go wrong" (https://frinkiac.com/caption/S06E04/442491) situation.
It's indeed the case that ServiceWorkers are powerful and they open up new avenues of potential misbehavior. While the fundamental event-driven design of SW's where they're only spawned by explicit user action (browsing the site providing the service worker) or user-approved site actions (push notifications which require explicit user approval), there's still the potential for bad actors. Implementers share these concerns, which is where efforts like https://github.com/beverloo/budget-api and (potential? not sure if this is actually implemented?) heuristics like Chrome generating a (desktop) notification if a ServiceWorker gets woken up by a push and doesn't generate its own notification come from.
And I believe it's in these goals of having browsers proactively inhibit bad behavior and make users aware of the behavior of sites they have implicitly or explicitly granted permissions to, that the best defense of users is found. Which is to say, there will always be UI that helps users find and kill service workers, but the design goals are likely to center around a) debugging, b) performance/"what on earth is making my browser/computer run so slow!", or c) storage/"where did all my disk space go?" rather than one of manual gardening of service workers like they are weeds that spring up and users are responsible for cleaning up after.