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Mozilla firefox 56.0.2 download
Mozilla firefox 56.0.2 download








mozilla firefox 56.0.2 download

And seems to have changed the way it deals with zoom like on one page if I zoom the top bar starts overlapping…Īnother edit: Damn my most important greasemonkey script is dead too, well not entirely it still does something just not quite what it is supposed to do. A bit pissed of I guess I will go back to that esr version or maybe just look for another browser.Įdit: And many sites display weirdly now with much too much room to the sides, first thought it was just because it killed the addon that saved my zoom but seems to be more than that. Yeah broke my session manager without having the decency of warning me that it was doing some big update without asking that breaks most of my addons.

mozilla firefox 56.0.2 download

The XSS, ability to block certain elements like iframes, audio/video, fonts, and other customizations? That's just icing on the cake. Sure I can disable scripts by default and go in and manually copy/paste domains to whitelist, but NoScript makes it trivial and easy. Because I don't bother loading 99% of the bullshit fluff.įor me, it's what stops me from going to chrome. Between uBlock and NoScript, I can support sites I like without risking a compromise via a malicious ad, and I don't see any difference in speed between Quantum and 56. There's lots of little examples out there, but the concept that scripts aren't' still a major pain is fallacious at best. None of it is necessary, you just whitelist the news domain and your story loads, the other spy scripts don't. Even with the ad whitelisted, the domain and subsequent active content from the injection is blocked.Īnother example is if you go to any of the common news domains, they have literally dozens of partner contents, connections, and other bullshit that tries to load. So why is this important? Well let's say that a malicious hacker manages to compromise an ad on a site you whitelisted, which redirects your browser to their malicious site. shit like adwords or google analytics, or facebook). Whitelisting is as easy as clicking the "Scripts blocked" button and clicking which ones to allow permanently, temporarily, or permanently block (e.g. You can limit the approvals to specific elements, or entire domains and subdomains. NoScript only blocks active content, but it automatically blocks it from all domains until you whitelist it. Simply put, an addon like ublock origin will automatically block all content from specific subdomains commonly associated with ads.










Mozilla firefox 56.0.2 download