Firefox has included the built-in Content Blocking feature that operates in Private Browsing windows and Strict Tracking Protection Mode… This reply was modified 1 year, 5 months ago by Bob99.įirefox 87 introduces SmartBlock for Private Browsing So, from the sounds of things in the release notes, I’d say sit tight for now. Note: This issue only affected Windows operating systems. Take note of the following from that advisory: Info on the critical security hole patched in FF 85.0.1 can be found here. In the earliest posts of the history is where you’ll usually find the system configuration of the reporting party which will include the OS environment. The other bugs are on Windows and Mac systems, and the one critical security bug is only present on Windows systems:Ĭlicking the individual bug numbers listed in the advisories will bring up the detailed listing of the bug’s history. I don’t know why anyone would do that when they could just quit, but that’s how it seems to me from the –įrom what I can see in the release notes for 85.0.1 and 85.0.2, the only Linux-related bug involves using the Firefox flatpak edition of Firefox for Linux. More and more, I get the impression that they really don’t want to be developing Firefox and are trying to destroy it once and for all so that they can go do something else. The KDE one is more than ten years old they’ve refused to play nice for all of that time. Why Mozilla insists on its hostility to KDE, I do not know, but it’s just one of a growing list of outright user hostilities within Firefox that is pushing me away. They’ve offered this patch to Mozilla, who has refused to accept it or to create their own version (with or without the hacky but effective helper application the OpenSUSE version uses). In order to get the same level of integration with Firefox, I have to use the OpenSUSE edition, which uses the patch OpenSUSE itself created and maintained to make Firefox work with KDE like Chromium does. Every Chromium derivative I have seen runs with KDE perfectly right out of the box with no muss and no fuss, but not Firefox. One of my growing list of criticisms of Mozilla is that they utterly refuse to allow their official build of Firefox to play nice with the KDE Plasma desktop. I’ll get something newer when it comes down the pike. So for now, you can use Firefox ESR release based on Firefox 24 with security updates included with each newer release until around October 14th (at which time you'll need to switch to a newer Firefox 31 ESR release if you want to continue receiving updated releases including security patches).I’m not in any hurry to get new versions of Firefox! I’m still on 85.0 here, and that’s fine by me. See the first link above and it includes a calendar showing the overlap between Firefox 24 and 31 ESR releases (the 31.x downloads are already out now, but 24.x will still be updated until October 14th). Unfortunately, it looks like I'll be forced to upgrade to a Firefox ESR release based on Firefox 31.x sometime in October. English version of Firefox 24.7.0 ESR for Windows: If you want to download it, just make sure to click on the link at the top of the downloads list here to show "Firefox 24" versus "Firefox 31" (the default list), as Firefox 31 has already been released, even though you can still get the Firefox 24 ESR downloads.įor example, this is the U.S. The ESR versions still get all of the security updates, without the constant User Interface and feature changes you see in the normal release cycle. I don't know, as I was so upset at the changes made by newer Firefox releases that I switched to using the Firefox ESR (Extended Support Release) versions with both Linux and Windows. Firefox keeps wanting to update and I keep avoiding it. If anyone can tell me if that's still the case, or if problems have been resolved, I would appreciate it. I have held off updating Firefox to version 31 because I had read that there were some issues with it a while back.
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