Esta extensión de Firefox debería ser parte de Firefox e ir más allá y confinar aun más las paginas pero es un comienzo https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/feedback/addon/@testpilot-containers/ Puedes decir que Facebook se abra confinado en un contenedor para que Facebook solo pueda saber que haces en Facebook y no que buscas en otros sitios, por ejemplo. Pero puede hacerlo con cada categoría que quieras. Yo tengo para Meta, para Github, para LinkedIn, para Microsoft, para Compras, para Trabajo, etc. #Privacidad#Firefox#Consejo
Firefox Onebar's repository has moved from Codeberg to https://git.gay/freeplay/Firefox-Onebar ! Along with some minor updates to the style :blobfoxfloofhappy:
Firefox users, is there any way to search youtube in the address bar? In Chrome I just type "you" and hit tab and it goes into a search right in the bar. Same for some other sites.
Recordatorio periódico por si aún no has conseguido desengancharte totalmente de las redes sociales que trafican con tus datos privados: desinstala la app móvil y recurre a su versión web con un navegador que respete a sus usuarios y admita extensiones para bloquear publicidad.
Twitter e Instagram desde #Firefox con #uBlock son mucho más llevaderas. Eso sí, no hay truco para eliminar su toxicidad o desfase con los bots.
[Depuis votre navigateur] Tapez man:ls dans la barre d'adresse de Firefox : il se peut que #Firefox (si version récente) vous demande alors si vous voulez visualiser le résultat dans son Aide. Et si oui, alors... une nouvelle fenêtre s'ouvre, avec la page du Manuel sur ls (ou toute autre commande en remplaçant ls).
De plus, il y a le #format hypertexte entre les pages !
Et de plus, info:ls peut aussi être utilisé et donner le même résultat.
PS : et man:groff explique Groff (utilisé par man ;-) )
#askfedi I remember someone posting awhile back about a #Firefox extension that collected #RSS feeds as you browsed, but I can't seem to find it anymore in the mastodon search or in Firefox's extension search. Anyone know of such an extension?
Dites moi les gens qui utilisent les favoris dans #firefox ET qui y mett(ai)ent des étiquettes (#tags). Avez-vous vu disparaitre l'interface qui permet, justement, de mettre ces étiquettes ?
This... not only doesn't seem right, but seems like it shouldn't be possible. A disabled extension is still running in Firefox.
toggling the enabled toggle back on and off again made it actually be disabled but... I'm thinking there's a bug in FF where under certain circumstances a disabled plugin can actually be running and you wouldn't know unless you had it pinned (and thus visible). This seems like a security issue.
There's even a short built-in help system if you click on the input method icons on the top right, that works almost as intended except for this #Firefox missing feature:
I'm trying to figure out the best browser combination for my needs. Generally, Firefox covers almost everything I need, but it's slow on Android and drains a lot of battery. I've tried Vivaldi, Chrome, and Brave. Of these, only Brave has the features I need, like full history sync (not just typed URLs), and the ability to send tabs to other devices. However, with its focus on crypto and AI, it seems too hype-driven for me. Also, none of them work on FreeBSD without using a Linux jail.
I think the reason I can't decide what browser to use is that I can't decide what degree of privacy protection I want. I want to keep my data out of the hands of greedy tech companies, but I don't know if I care about fingerprinting enough to use something like Mullvad Browser, which has Tor-like effect caused by everyone using the same configuration.
I almost think I just want to stick to using plain Firefox with my own hardening or something like Arkenfox. I don't know. So many layers to what seems like a simple decision. Any thoughts? #firefox#privacy#security
Was fiddling with email from my health insurance company that came "secure" via #Cisco secure email of some sort. I followed all the instructions and could not get it to open. Finally, tried Chrome and it worked. So the problem appeared to be some compatibility w Cisco's system of encryption/authentication and #Firefox. I googled it, and found this: https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/security/email_encryption/CRES/recipient_guide/b_Recipient/b_Recipient_chapter_0101.pdf
Scroll down and you'll find that in order to use the thing, you have to turn on cross site scripting.