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Originally posted by ArMaP
I don't have that strange problem with Firefox 3.5.3, so it's difficult to help you.
Is it me or is Firefox getting worse? I have seen so many people complaining that I think they must be doing something wrong (or people are only noticing it now).
Edit: did you saw this page?
I disagree, the best thing is doing what the user wants. Right or wrong, the user is the one using the program, not the other way around, so the program must do exactly what the user wants it to do.
Originally posted by leftystrat
I do advise, however, that the browser is doing the best thing. Blindly accepting cookies can cause all sorts of privacy issues.
That's one of the reasons I like Opera, it does all that without the need for plugins or addons.
If this concerns you, you can use a plugin (Cookie Monster is one) that will remember cookie settings on a per-site basis. That way you can set it to accept ATS/BTS cookies always, per session, or never. I have it set to allow ATS/BTS but deny all cookies by default. Same with _javascript and Flash.
Opera will let you set cookies by site, but you need an add-on (actually it's called a user script) to control the scripts by site, it's called "blockit", which is like the "noscript" add-on for Firefox which can allow scripts on sites like ATS while blocking them from other, potentially malicious sites.
Originally posted by ArMaP
That's one of the reasons I like Opera, it does all that without the need for plugins or addons.
Originally posted by leftystrat
I have it set to allow ATS/BTS but deny all cookies by default. Same with _javascript and Flash.
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
Opera will let you set cookies by site, but you need an add-on (actually it's called a user script) to control the scripts by site, it's called "blockit", which is like the "noscript" add-on for Firefox which can allow scripts on sites like ATS while blocking them from other, potentially malicious sites.
It allows JavaScript, Java and other executable content to run only from trusted domains of your choice
this feature is inadequate. NoScript allows the user to turn off Java, _javascript and similar programs on all sites except those specifically allowed without breaking the browsing experience. In our experience, Opera does not.
To see what we mean, try the following:
* Disable _javascript from running by default, by clicking Tools > Preferences, highlighting the Content tab and unchecking Enable _javascript.
* Surf to Google Mail and attempt to log in. You'll be unsuccessful because _javascript is required.
* Now, right-click on the page and allow _javascript to run only on that page. You will continue to receive an error message telling you _javascript is required.
In other words, the superiority of NoScript is that it makes it easy to turn off scripting by default and whitelist only those sites deemed trustworthy. Opera's site preferences feature attempts to offer the same capability, but in our real-world tests, has fallen short.
Originally posted by RuneSpider
Ended up using chome... which I just don't like nearly as much, but still works.