This article summarizes the Firefox Settings panels and what types of settings they contain. In the Menu bar at the top of the screen, click Firefox and select Preferences.Click the menu button and select Settings. The following panels are available:

Language and Appearance

Website appearance, Colors, Fonts, Zoom and Language: This is where you can change website appearance settings in Firefox, change the fonts and colors websites use, where to change the size of webpage content, where you can choose the language to display menus, notifications, messages and other parts of the Firefox interface, where to choose a preferred display language for web pages and where you can choose to use the Firefox spell checker.


Download Firefox Settings


Download File 🔥 https://tlniurl.com/2y3HrD 🔥



Browser Privacy

Enhanced Tracking Protection, Cookies and Site Data, Forms & Passwords, History and Address Bar: This is where you can control settings for the Firefox Enhanced Tracking Protection and Do Not Track features, manage website cookies, website data storage and cached web content, where you can set how to fill in forms and manage passwords, manage your browsing, download, search and form history and set how the address bar works.

i do know that it available in night and beta but i want to use release/stable version i do some config in firefox and when something happen in certain site i do not want to test if it related to one of my custom setting or a bug in beta/night version

I don't need software updates changing my preferences. If I have to search through the settings every time Firefox updates to see what was sneakily reenabled without my authorisation, then there is considerable friction in updating. It makes for a poor user experience.

Same deal, Firefox is changing my preferences each update. Credit card, snippets, renewing add-ons that are already loaded and so on ad infinitum, amen. I find this rather deceitful and concerning. My feeling is that any privacy settings might be negated against my will. Please address this issue.

I am having the same issue, I have just installed the bttv addon for firefox, it is currently activated and I have restarted firefox yet there are no new options anywhere on twitch, not in the cogwheel near chat or in the drop down menu near my name.

I have completely reinstalled firefox and the bttv add-on and something has changed but I seem to be missing any sort of options that bttv had in the past. Now when I click on the cog wheel It shows what name I am using the ability to change my chat color pop out chat, add time stamp to chat. Where are the actual settings for this plugin, what happened? How do I set it to prevent chat clearing or message deleteing I am so confused

I found a fix for the issue I was having. Even though I removed and reinstalled firefox it seems the cache was not removed from my computer. Going into the firefox history and clear all the cache fixed everyting, its working now

Note: The implementation of storage.sync in Firefox relies on the Add-on ID. If you use storage.sync, you must set an ID for your extension using the browser_specific_settings key in manifest.json, as shown in the example manifest above. See Firefox bug 1323228 for related information.

The menu includes settings to control the location of the Developer Tools. You can choose between the default setting at the bottom of the windows, or move the tools to the left or right side of the screen. These settings are particularly useful if you have a widescreen monitor. You can also choose to open the tools in a separate window.

The default preferences are stored in various files like all.js or firefox.js. It is not recommended that you modify these files directly (and you can't easily, because they are stored in the file omni.jar). You can, however, create your own Javascript files and place them in a location so that Firefox reads them as default preferences. That location is the defaults/pref directory in the same location where the Firefox executable is placed. Files in this location will be used for all Firefox users (they are not profile specific).

We are in a similar position with respect to software privacy settings. Pervasive tracking is too opaque and potential privacy harms are never felt immediately. The general argument from tech companies is that consumers can always decide to dive into their browser settings and modify the defaults. The reality is that most people will never do that. Yet, we know that people are broadly opposed to the status quo of pervasive cross-site tracking and data collection, particularly when they learn the details on how tracking actually works.

I looked in the CCK2, I don't think you can set those settings there, that would be the place to do it though. But perhaps you manually update the autoconfig files after creating them with the CCK and then deploy it that way.

Step 5) Inside of the firefox.cfg file, you will want to create a structure simpler to the following:(*Note: I have chose to use lockpref as it will lock the preference from the user being able to change it in about:config, if you do not use lock in front of pref, the user can still change it)

@whoami - if you want NON disposable qubes to be so configured, then you

can do this:

Open firefox and configure it as you will, (in a normal qube).

qvm-copy .mozilla to a template.

In the template, move the .mozilla folder in to /etc/skel

qubeA:

Check which firefox profile you are using - in firefox type

about:profiles in address bar.

You will see the name of the profile in use: remember it.

Close down firefox.

qvm-copy the .mozilla folder to qubeB

Thanks, I was focused on disposables, and totally forgot the switch at the moment. Right after the post, I did it simply overwriting the content of the default profile firefox folder with the content of the customized one.

'Firefox provides you with several mechanisms to protect your privacy. However, some of them are not enabled by default. In this guide you'll learn how to configure your Firefox browser settings to strengthen your online privacy.

To change basic privacy settings in Firefox, access the preferences menu by clicking on Edit > Preferences on the menu-bar, or by entering about:preferences in the URL bar, and then click on Privacy & Security (Fig. 1)

To manage advanced privacy settings, type about:config in the URL bar and press Enter. You'll then be greeted by a warning stating that some settings may affect Firefox's performance and security (Fig. 5). Click Accept the Risk and Continue to enter the settings page.

Warning: This settings page gives access to advanced features that might affect Firefox ability to function properly. Make sure you understand what you do. All changes are reversible.

Table 1 shows some of the advanced settings you can change to better protect your online privacy. Next to each setting is the value we recommend applying, as well as a brief summary on what that setting concerns. To enable or disable an option, enter its name in the search bar, and then double click to change the value. When you do so, the updated value is highlighted in bold and is automatically saved (Fig. 6).

This topic describes Firefox settings required by TestComplete for automated web testing. Make sure you have configured Firefox in this way on all the computers where you are going to record and run tests.

We also recommend that you configure certain Firefox settings as described below. While these settings are not necessarily required for automated testing, using them will help you avoid unexpected browser-specific warnings and improve Firefox performance during test recording and test run.

A bit of a minor post today. I have been meaning to write down my preferred settings for Firefox as its defaults leave a lot to be desired. This is unfortunate actually, as it might throw someone off if their first impression is less good because of this. Firefox is a great browser that feels fast, is privacy focused, and is not owned by a company that has a direct financial benefit to making the browser less useful for the end-user. That, and it's important for the internet as a whole that we are not too dependent on a single browser (again).

I keep Use smooth scrolling enabled. If you experience issues with how things look when scrolling and you're using Linux, try looking into vsync settings as your system might not have that properly enabled (an issue that still plagues most distributions for some weird reason).

Follow-Up Question: Is there a simple way to add specifications like this through the Sandboxie GUI (e.g., Sandbox/Default Box/Sandbox Settings/Resource Access/File Access/etc...), or is it best to just edit the settings directly? If directly, then does it matter where in the settings such a specification should go? -- jclarkw

In Ubuntu 22.04 the packaging of Firefox has changed, it is now packaged as a strictly-confined snap. This means that it generally cannot read files on the host system any longer, except for custom policies under /etc/firefox/policies/.Custom preferences under /etc/firefox/pref/ will be ignored.

What else? There must be some way to tell firefox not to make a new startup?

or

Maybe what you need to do is move your files somewhere else, let firefox make a new startup, then overwrite its new .mozila directory with your old one.

While logged out of Firefox Sync deleted the .mozilla directory and opened up a new Firefox, opened a few windows and changed a few settings. After that copied the .mozilla directory to a new machine. No joy. Aaaargh. 2351a5e196

dsstox download

sims 4 all dlc download reddit 2023

free download attendance sheet in excel

receipt template

download blocksite extension