I'm new to using a smart phone and have downloaded Firefox Mobile onto my Android phone. It works great when searching for a website but I have one that I already know and would like to go directly to it. Unfortunately every time I enter the URL I get a search for the website, not the website itself.

2.) The site I was trying to go to was a YouTube Private Playlist. I had been entering it (as you suggest) with the "www" but that didn't work. It only took me to a search. In the end I discovered that INSTEAD of "www" I needed to place an "m" at the beginning. That finally worked.


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While there is an option (which should be opt-out, not opt-in!) to encrypt the passwords locally using master passwords on Desktop, there just isn't one on Mobile! This is horrible, as anyone having access to your phone could also read your passwords.

This absolutely has to be integrated into Mobile, along with a general Fingerprint-unlock. I mean, its a privacy browser, and there are different factors of privacy. People having access to your browsing history and passwords, is one of the threats some people fear.

According to them, lock screen is more than enough, but that doesn't consider the very common use case where multiple people at a given home can know how to unlock a device. I may want to share my cellphone or tablet with my daughter so she can play a video game, but still be sure she won't mess with critical accounts from work. Like, I want her to play Stumble Guys whenever she wants without having to worry she may take down our web server just because I got distracted for a second. Most of my apps are quite harmless and I'm not afraid she mess with them, with the exception of something as powerful like a web browser. It's almost as critical as giving her open root access to a terminal.

Again, I get that having a master password in mobile doesn't make it more "secure" in the sense that it stays as hackable as without one, it doesn't really encrypt things, but still it would help as a deterrent for some unpleasant situations. And again, I don't get the reasoning specially because the same logic may be applied to computers: you can encrypt your partition and set a screen lock in most if not all operative systems, why is it different in mobile?

On mobile versions of Firefox, passwords are protected by your phone's own encryption instead of a primary password. On Android (which is what I use), this just means you have to re-enter the same passcode or PIN you use to unlock your phone (usually 4-6 numbers or a few words), and then you can see and copy any and all of the passwords you have saved in Firefox. This is much less secure than having a primary password, especially considering that if someone's snooping in your passwords like this, they either already know your phone's passcode or they're a hacker accessing your phone's files remotely, in which case they can brute force your passcode extremely easily.

It just makes sense to have a second layer of passwords to something as critical as, well, your passwords. I'm not worried about encryption, I'm worried about someone seeing me input my iOS passcode into my phone, and then being able to access my passwords because this feature doesn't exist.

@Detroit_yeetThe phones password or pin is protected like using fail2ban. You cant just brute-force all few thousand combinations to get the 5-digit pin right, it will be blocked after like 10 tries or so. Still using that password makes your phone very single-user-like

@KelleckYes KeepassDX is a good open-source example for this. It allows Fingerprint, Device password and custom password. In every case this login data creates a keyfile that then actually unlocks the password storage.

It would still make sense to have Firefox Start Master Password . E.g. when somebody caught your Android Password then using Firefox when you have enabled autofill in automatically some logins for web services get available which is very critical here should be a secon barrier. At least optional. Worst case somebody can execute payments etc. (PayPal user login etc.)

This is my biggest fear ,the fear of being g hacked, or getting viruses that you would think Active Armour and Norton would stop them in there tracks,thy let 32virsuses in my cell as subscription expired before I got my year paid again now my cell infected and my SD card ,so I got rid of chrome put in firefox ,but firefox has changed ,now you have to add Mozilla then in Mozilla you have to put in a master password where does all of this end a d I my self am 66 so I lose my pieces of paper I write on , lol things r way to complex these days but I get why they are. Hackers these hackers think we owe them ,we don't owe them anything. Work just like all of us had too. If you want something work for. It is rewarding and it would simplify our browsers. I use to have Firefox ,you turned on all you wanted covered right through firefox ,not now. We have to keep adding on. Does it ever end???!!!

When I sent my phone in for repair the repair person asked for my pin code (didn't boot anymore), because that would make his work easier debugging any issues. I would not have had any issues giving it to him, because all the other privacy/security sensitive apps I use have a secondary fingerprint unlock for anything important (banking, another password manager) or are less important. But not Firefox, and the passwords there I really did not want to expose to others), which caused them to have to factory reset my phone instead of being able to keep my data.

All that is to say that not having a 2nd unlock option for something so important as passwords is a really bad idea. I'd be happy for it to be opt-in, and optional, but not giving the option is (I think) really the wrong decision here. Please reconsider.

I agree with everyone above. At least have an option to require primary password before using password auto-fill (or viewing passwords), so I can let me kids use my phone but not get all my passwords.

The biggest problem is not having any unlock request when using autofill inside the browser! We have fingerprint request when usin in other apps, but not when using the purple passwords into Firefox browser, this is absolutely crazy!

Mapping to key Firefox footprints around the globe, leading operators Deutsche Telekom, Etisalat, Smart, Sprint, Telecom Italia, Telefnica and Telenor are backing the open Firefox OS as an exciting new entrant to the smartphone marketplace. They have also identified the potential of the technology to deliver compelling smartphone experiences at attainable prices.

Due to the optimization of the platform for entry-level smartphones and the removal of unnecessary middleware layers, mobile operators will have the ability to offer richer experiences at a range of price points including at the low end of the smartphone price range, helping to drive adoption across developing markets.

Mozilla has been a pioneer and advocate for the Web for more than a decade. We create and promote open standards that enable innovation and advance the Web as a platform for all. Today, hundreds of millions of people worldwide use Mozilla Firefox to discover, experience and connect to the Web on computers, tablets and mobile phones. For more information please visit

Firefox OS was designed to provide a complete,[9] community-based alternative operating system, for running web applications directly or those installed from an application marketplace. The applications use open standards and approaches such as JavaScript and HTML5, a robust privilege model, and open web APIs that can communicate directly with hardware, e.g. cellphone hardware.[5] As such, Mozilla with Firefox OS competed with commercially developed operating systems such as Apple's iOS, Google's Android, Microsoft's Windows Phone,[9] BlackBerry's BlackBerry 10, Samsung's/Linux Foundation's Tizen, and Jolla's Sailfish OS. In December 2015, Mozilla announced it would stop development of new Firefox OS smartphones[10] and, in September 2016, announced the end of development.[11] Successors to Firefox OS include the discontinued B2G OS[12] and Acadine Technologies' H5OS as well as KaiOS Technologies' KaiOS and Panasonic's My Home Screen.[13][14]

Firefox OS was publicly demonstrated in February 2012, on Android-compatible smartphones.[15][16] By December 16, 2014, fourteen operators in 28 countries throughout the world offered Firefox OS phones.[17]

On December 8, 2015, Mozilla announced that it would stop sales of Firefox OS smartphones through carriers.[18] Mozilla later announced that Firefox OS smartphones would be discontinued by May 2016, as the development of "Firefox OS for smartphones"[19] would cease after the release of version 2.6. Around the same time, it was reported that Acadine Technologies, a startup founded by Li Gong (former president of Mozilla Corporation) with various other former Mozilla staff among its employees, would take over the mission of developing carrier partnerships, for its own Firefox OS derivative H5OS.[20]

In January 2016, Mozilla announced that Firefox OS would power Panasonic's UHD TVs (as previously announced Firefox OS "would pivot to connected devices").[21] In September 2016, Mozilla announced that work on Firefox OS had ceased, and that all B2G-related code would be removed from mozilla-central.[22]

This led to much blog coverage.[23][24] According to Ars Technica, "Mozilla says that B2G is motivated by a desire to demonstrate that the standards-based open Web has the potential to be a competitive alternative to the existing single-vendor application development stacks offered by the dominant mobile operating systems."[25]

In February 2013, Mozilla announced plans for its global commercial roll-out of Firefox OS.[32]Mozilla announced at a press conference before the start of Mobile World Congress in Barcelona that the first wave of Firefox OS devices would be available to consumers in Brazil, Colombia, Hungary, Mexico, Montenegro, Poland, Serbia, Spain and Venezuela. Mozilla also announced that LG Electronics, ZTE, Huawei and TCL Corporation had committed to making Firefox OS devices.[33] 152ee80cbc

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