On rare occasions, I have to toggle one or two js sources. (Although the sites might not look pretty)
I personally use no script and in my use case, I can usually use websites without toggling the js sources in no script. Last time I checked, you can easily get away with this using an extension called “NoScript” which disables javascript (which is used for fingerprinting in the majority of cases). > This is usually excused by the existence of about:config, which users can use to “fix” or “harden” Firefox (while in reality just fingerprinting themselves in the process). In the end, you were a toxic brave shill all along. Thought you were a just-critic who was enthusiastic about brave and had my respect for 300 seconds. Yikes, saw your comments on a different thread.
Firefox's PDF Viewer supports filling out XFA-based forms, which some governments and banks use.
See our full coverage of the new insecure downloads blocking feature of Firefox here. Search for dom.block_download_insecure.Confirm that you will be careful if the warning prompt is displayed.
Load about:config in the Firefox address bar.The preference dom.block_download_insecure can be toggled to allow insecure downloads again, by setting it to False. Insecure downloads are blocked by defaultįirefox blocks insecure downloads by default now (non-secure downloads on secure webpages).
See our full coverage of Firefox's new tab unloading feature here. Mozilla hopes that the feature will reduce the number of memory-related crashes that users of Firefox experience. Tabs are unloaded based on last access time, memory usage and other attributes. It is an automated feature that will unload tabs if available "system memory is critically low". Unload tabs on Windows when memory is critically lowįirefox includes a new tab unloading feature on Windows. Tip: open this test site in your browser to see if it supports AVIF. The Firefox implementation supports still images, "with colorspace support for both full and limited range colors, and image transforms for mirroring and rotation", but no animated images. It is an open format that offers "excellent compression" and has no patent restrictions. AVIF support is enabled by default in Firefox 93. Mozilla planned to enable AVIF support in Firefox 92, but postponed the release.