Did you know that the websites you browse can ask your phone how far away your face is from the screen, and that they can determine the ambient light levels of the room you’re in? No, me neither, and I do this stuff for a living.. The fact it is that the web browser you’re using now is stuffed full of exotic, esoteric, somebody-somewhere-will-use-them features of questionable utility.. Firefox is taking essential steps to eliminate privacy-invasive methods, empowering users with better control over their data for a safer browsing experience. Firefox, Data Protection, Web Tracking, Privacy Features. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
It was just a few weeks ago that Firefox got a fresh security boost on the eve of its eighth birthday, but this week Mozilla gave users of its popular browser a better way to protect their privacy as well. . "One of the most often-requested features in the private browsing support for Firefox has been the ability to open a private window without closing the entire session," wrote Firefox product manager Asa Dotzler in a Tuesday post on the Future of Firefox blog. The link for this article located at Tech World is no longer available. . Firefox's new private browsing mode enhances user privacy by preventing history storage, blocks third-party tracking, and simplifies privacy settings for secure surfing. Firefox Browser, Private Browsing, Security Features, User Privacy, Mozilla Updates. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Judging by the frenzied claims of lawmakers like US representative Jackie Speier, enabling the Do Not Track feature ranks up there with locking doors and shredding credit card statements. . DNT settings, which ask ad networks and the websites you visit not to track you, are the brainchild of security and privacy rabble-rouser Christopher Soghoian. His idea was to port the functionality of the Do Not Call list to the Internet, without forcing users to figure out cookies or register their computers in a national database. Firefox, IE9, and Safari all offer the option. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . DNT settings, which ask ad networks and the websites you visit not to track you, are the brainchild . judging, frenzied, claims, lawmakers, representative, jackie, speier, enabling. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The little lock icon that appears in your Web browser's window is supposed to prove you are engaging in a safe transaction. But it may be nothing more than a visual placebo. The icon is intended to indicate that information is . . . . The little lock icon that appears in your Web browser's window is supposed to prove you are engaging in a safe transaction. But it may be nothing more than a visual placebo. The icon is intended to indicate that information is being encrypted as it moves from your computer to the e-commerce site's computer. But complete and uncrackable encryption of outgoing and incoming information may not always take place every time the lock appears on your computer's screen. And safe arrival at the site's servers doesn't guarantee your information is safe forever. Experts say that once the data arrives at the e-commerce site, it's often stored decrypted on the site's servers. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . The lock icon in web browsers signifies website security, particularly in e-commerce, ensuring encrypted connections and protecting sensitive data, fostering trust.. Data Encryption, Web Security Features, E-Commerce Risks, Online Safety, Secure Transactions. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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