Firefox Starts Blocking Third-Party Cookies By Default (venturebeat.com) 51
An anonymous reader quotes a report from VentureBeat: Mozilla today announced a slew of privacy improvements. The company has turned on Enhanced Tracking Protection, which blocks cookies from third-party trackers in Firefox, by default. Mozilla has also improved its Facebook Container extension, released a Firefox desktop extension for its rebranded Lockwise password keeper, and updated Firefox Monitor with a dashboard for multiple email addresses.
If you download a fresh copy of Firefox today, Enhanced Tracking Protection will be on by default as part of the Standard setting. That means third-party tracking cookies are blocked without users having to change a thing. You will notice Enhanced Tracking Protection working if there is a shield icon in the address bar. If you click on the shield icon and open the Content Blocking section and then Cookies, you'll see a Blocking Tracking Cookies section. There you can see the companies listed as third-party cookies and trackers that Firefox has blocked. You can also turn off blocking for a specific site. The feature focuses on third-party trackers (the ad industry) while allowing first-party cookies (logins, where you last left off, and so on). Mozilla says it is enabling Enhanced Tracking Protection by default because most users don't change their browser settings.
If you download a fresh copy of Firefox today, Enhanced Tracking Protection will be on by default as part of the Standard setting. That means third-party tracking cookies are blocked without users having to change a thing. You will notice Enhanced Tracking Protection working if there is a shield icon in the address bar. If you click on the shield icon and open the Content Blocking section and then Cookies, you'll see a Blocking Tracking Cookies section. There you can see the companies listed as third-party cookies and trackers that Firefox has blocked. You can also turn off blocking for a specific site. The feature focuses on third-party trackers (the ad industry) while allowing first-party cookies (logins, where you last left off, and so on). Mozilla says it is enabling Enhanced Tracking Protection by default because most users don't change their browser settings.
So important that we post it twice (Score:5, Insightful)
Finally the way it should be. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Says the guy flinging around childish vulgarity like "horseshit"...
A scientifically and psychologically legitimate term like "retarded" applies because that's what you'd have to be to not notice the anti-privacy behaviour staring you in the face with Firefox. The fact that you couldn't figure that out confirms my suspicion was true after all.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Who cares? You block me, you disappear, 3rd party cookies or not.
Also, you show how much you value your users.
I still find it hilarious to see the bunch of spyware-infested US websites sites posting a 403 error page that says "You, the user, are our most important priority, therefore we fuck your privacy and will block you because we won't be bothered to comply with any privacy regulations like the GDPR". They truly shows care and concern. Well, you know what, fuck you too.
Even the "Error 403 while trying t
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Marketers will hate this. (Score:1)
Because they think that your eyes should be forced open to watch their ads. That follow you around the internet.
Doesn't happen on TV with my IRL Adblocker v1.0 (Score:2)
Please pay for editors... (Score:4, Insightful)
But then again, maybe their repetition is based on being trained to repeat "You want fries with that?"
Only third-party cookies? (Score:5, Funny)
Pity it's not blocking dupes [slashdot.org] yet.
Re: Do most users even care (Score:1)
The difference being Chrome is shovelware and people download FF willfully.
I wish they would disable all autoplay videos (Score:4, Insightful)
I wish they would disable all autoplay videos by default, with sound or without. I keep adding filters for yahoo finance video sources and every day they add more sources. Video became new animated gif of the internet. There should be an option to make all content click to play.
Good luck with that: Pure CSS motion JPEG (Score:3)
I wish they would disable all autoplay videos by default, with sound or without.
In order to disable autoplay videos, you have to detect autoplay videos. If you disable autoplaying WebM and MP4, ad networks will fall back to GIF. If you disable that too, there are ways to make JPEG and PNG move [pineight.com] with either JavaScript or CSS.
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How many pages in the test suite cause Safari to play video?
Re:I wish they would disable all autoplay videos (Score:4, Informative)
Try going to about:config and setting media.autoplay.default to 1. The values are kind of counter-intuitive (0 = allowed, 1 = blocked, 2 = ask) but seems to work on most sites I hit. YMMV
Is there a list or do they guess? (Score:2)
Just like RSS feeds (Score:1)