Are you a Firefox user? Mozilla is increasing browser privacy with encrypted DNS. Learn more: . Mozilla is about to turn on-by-default an oft-overlooked privacy feature in Firefox. The desktop version of the browser will soon automatically encrypt your website requests using a feature called DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH), itsaid on Friday. DoH lets browsers send Domain Name System (DNS) requests over the encrypted version of the HTTP protocol. DNS is the service that takes a human-readable name like nakedsecurity.sophos.com and turns it into an IP address a computer can use. Your browser asks a DNS resolver for this information. In turn, it asks several other DNS servers on your behalf. It then returns the IP address linked to that URL so that a browser like Firefox can contact it to download web pages. Your DNS service provider is usually your ISP, but it doesn’t have to be. There are third party commercial DNS services too. The link for this article located at NakedSecurity is no longer available. . Mozilla is enabling encrypted DNS in Firefox for improved browser privacy by default with DNS-over-HTTPS.. Firefox, Encrypted DNS, Network Security, Mozilla, DNS-over-HTTPS. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
From the forthcoming version 4.1, Google is doing away with the Chrome feature which has attracted the most criticism: unique IDs. Until now, this token has been stored in the user_experience_metrics.user_id key in the User Data\Local State file in the Chrome installation folder (C:\User\[Name]\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome under Vista).. Supplementing other measures to improve the browser's reputation for data protection, in a white paperPDF on Chrome data protection, Google has announced that it will in future delete the token once Google Chrome runs and checks for updates the first time. From version 4.1, the allegedly anonymous ID will only be used to report successful installation of the browser to Google. This step is largely symbolic, as Chrome has never attempted to identify users using the client ID, which is reassigned each time the browser is updated. Investigations using network sniffers have failed to refute Google's privacy statement that this ID is used exclusively for checking for updates and for the crash reporter (which is disabled by default) The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . Mozilla plans to eliminate tracker cookies from Firefox, promoting user confidentiality and internet safety in future updates.. Chrome Updates, User Privacy, Data Protection, Browser Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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