Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Firefox Privacy Social Networks The Internet

Firefox 70 Arrives With Social Tracking Blocked By Default (venturebeat.com) 40

An anonymous reader writes: Mozilla today launched Firefox 70 for Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, and iOS. Firefox 70 includes social tracking protection, a Privacy Protections report, new Lockwise features, and performance improvements on Windows and macOS. Firefox 70 for desktop is available for download now on Firefox.com, and all existing users should be able to upgrade to it automatically. The Android version is trickling out slowly on Google Play and the iOS version is on Apple's App Store. According to Mozilla, Firefox has about 250 million active users, making it a major platform for web developers to consider. With Firefox 70, Mozilla now also includes social tracking protection under the Standard setting. It blocks cross-site tracking cookies from sites like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Firefox 70 Arrives With Social Tracking Blocked By Default

Comments Filter:
  • by tuppe666 ( 904118 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2019 @12:16PM (#59335366)

    It is my reason for choosing the Android platform. It is amazing.

    • by gosand ( 234100 )

      I switched to Firefox Focus on my phone, I used to use Dolphin. So far I like it, but will admit I don't do a ton of browsing on my phone.

    • by fbobraga ( 1612783 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2019 @12:38PM (#59335490) Homepage
      The ability to use desktop add-ons in the phone (I use https://noscript.net/ [noscript.net] in my phone, to bypass some paywalls...), and to easily configure it (in the same way that on the desktop) is a game changer to me :)
      • Kiwi Browser also allows this apparently, also has a built-in adblocker. It's a Chrome knock-off, though.
      • OMFG noscript.

        I browse with noscript all the time on my desktop. Every one in a while I need to use a browser without it installed. Hells bells the web is bloody terrible without it. bling flash HELLO I'M HERE PAY ATTENTION TO ME. I have it on my phone too, and do almost all of my browsing with it.

        • Every one in a while I need to use a browser without it installed

          it's my case too: I use (stock, on phone) Google Chrome in this cases

        • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

          I moved to uMatrix because NoScript wasn't available for Firefox Quantum when it first came out. Nowadays, I like uMatrix more and I am not looking back at NoScript at all.

        • by Agripa ( 139780 )

          OMFG noscript.

          I browse with noscript all the time on my desktop. Every one in a while I need to use a browser without it installed. Hells bells the web is bloody terrible without it. bling flash HELLO I'M HERE PAY ATTENTION TO ME. I have it on my phone too, and do almost all of my browsing with it.

          It is slowly getting worse even with Noscript because sites are now taking advantage of the native HTML5 or whatever pop-up functionality. I have not yet figured out how to block this.

    • Firefox for Android really only selling point is the fact it is not Chrome.
      • Apparently, i'ts has less resource heavy (at least with noscript): some sites are barely usable with Google Chrome in my Samsung Galaxy S5 (from 2012, with lineageos.org)
        • The Galaxy SIII is from 2012, the S5 is from 2014. I happen to have one of each in my household, though the S5 was purchased in 2015 (but before the release of the S6), in the hard to get / not sold in EU dual SIM version... I have updated the SIII to lineage, but since about a year, it's no longer supported. GaÃl Duval's /e/ does support it (supposedly), so I'll be looking there soon. Perhaps it can run FF70, I'll find out.
  • by thechemic ( 1329333 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2019 @12:20PM (#59335396)
    It should block cross-site tracking cookies FROM ALL SITES by default: not just social media.
  • by DarkRookie2 ( 5551422 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2019 @12:36PM (#59335468)
    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      It's pretty telling that google removed mobile waterfox it from play store recently while keeping firefox. Unlike firefox, it doesn't sell them user data, because it doesn't collect it.

  • https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781982

  • by xack ( 5304745 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2019 @12:51PM (#59335542)
    Firefox and the browsers that are descended from it like Waterfox, Icecat and Pale Moon are all that is left from a Webkit/Blink monopoly on the web. Both of the original net giants Netscape and Internet Explorer are dead now and replaced by Chromium Edge we need to make sure that the "Phoenix" that Firefox emerged from keeps on going. If any of the Mozilla developers still read Slashdot, please make sure you listen to your power users and bring back browser freedom. Make sure every extension that was broken by the retirement of XUL gets a replacement and stop messing with the UI every five minutes. Seamonkey still has the same UI from 20 years ago, why can't Firefox has stability instead of developing "fidget spinner" UIs.
    • Firefox has long given up on people like us.
      They just rather chase Chromes coat tails.
      How much longer until FF is just another Chrome clone. I give it another 2 years.
  • I switched from Chrome the day I started looking through my Google account settings and realized that ever freaking site I visited on Chrome was being tracked in an online history by Google.

    Also, at this point Firefox is the only major browser that's developing its own rendering engine.
  • by kaka.mala.vachva ( 1164605 ) on Tuesday October 22, 2019 @12:54PM (#59335550)
    What about Firefox Focus? It operates in private mode only - does the latest Firefox release have better privacy protection than Focus?
  • Now just let my Privacy origin reset to Canada, since I'm a dual citizen and ... zero tracking.

    Privacy is in the Canadian Constitution.

  • Food for thoughts...

    This is perhaps more like Google promoting HTTPS to prevent others from having access to user intel.

    Each major company is now trying to tie consumers to their platform: Google initiated migration to HTTPS-everything and recently stopped showing URLs in search results (sic!), social media and other platforms try to make every user stay within their "spysystem" so they can gather/use/sell as much data as possible.

    Firefox is an offender of sort by itself - it enforces by default DNS over HT

  • If you believe that any browser has the capability to block social tracking... I've got a bridge to sell you.
  • Why in hell is there any social tracking in there in the first place?
  • Enable media/frame/font in its preferences for UNTRUSTED sites and enable all options for TRUSTED and DEFAULT sites;
    And enable "Cascade top document's restrictions to subdocuments"

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

Working...