Honestly, Firefox and uBlock Origin together form a pretty solid combo - that's all I use.
See privacyguides.org recommendations for tuning FF & uBO settings.
A place to discuss the news and latest developments on the open-source browser Firefox
Honestly, Firefox and uBlock Origin together form a pretty solid combo - that's all I use.
See privacyguides.org recommendations for tuning FF & uBO settings.
I've been doing so for years, sometimes they do bit I will disable when they do.
Sometimes they do...?
Regular firefox with enhanced protection on by default + ublock origin does most of the work for me. Personally I also like to add a user agent switcher on top of it. Oh and the Facebook container extension, that one is a must.
Lots of good ones in this thread, but one I don't see is Adnauseam. Think of it as the inverse of uBlock Origin, in fact it is based on UO and you can even access the UO UI in it.
Basically: they can't track you if you don't load any trackers, sure.
But they also can't track you if you "click" literally every ad, plus it messes with their ad revenue calculations and tracking statistics.
A lot of people mentioning things like Privacy Badger, NoScript, ClearURLs, Ghostery, etc. Can anyone explain to me what benefit these provide over a properly configured uBO setup?
My understanding is these are all redundant, and just serve to slow things down or provide ways to leak your data (looking at you Ghostery...)
Also saw a comment about Multi Account Containers. I don't see this as necessary, at least in my case, ever since they introduced first party cookies isolation by default. The only application I see is if you want to log into the same website with two different accounts, e.g., using Outlook for work and personal email on the same machine.
tl;dr - FF+uBO=dream team
Also try to use the Container feature in Firefox. I have acting Google all contained in one subset for example, so none of their tabs gets a view on my other tabs.
Firefox rolled out Total Cookie Protection by default back in April. Essentially putting every website in a container by default.
Ah cool I didn’t know that, thank you!
Decentraleyes - prevents tracking through content delivery.
Decentraleyes is AFAIK severely outdated. Use LocalCDN if you must, though I personally am not convinced there's any real threat model where these are useful.
Thanks for the info - this is the sort of stuff that I installed a long time ago, then forgot about it. I'll look for further info on LocalCDN.
No Script, UBlock and container tabs, specifically I have containers for Reddit, Google, Amazon, Pixiv and Discord.
Privacy Badger, Cookie Autodelete.
+1 for Cookie Autodelete. Forgot to mention it. Have some more advanced options than the native cookie delete, fx whitelisting. Privacy Badger broke some things for me but I think I'll give it another shot given the fine recommendations in this thread.
When privacy badger breaks something i just turn it off for that site if i HAVE to use it. Otherwise i find another site.
Both LocalCDN and any anti ad-block scripts are useless nowadays. uBO by itself does quite a bit of defusing itself as long as no other extensions conflict with it (so, make sure it's the only ad blocker you have) (also enable the built-in annoyance filters. They deal with anti-adblocks as well)
Noscript can also be replaced with uBO's dynamic filters/advanced mode. Read it's wiki if you want to learn how
Is localdns backed in Firefox or ublock now?
Please elaborate how LocalCDN is useless.
Anti ad blocker blocker scripts have been installed because of ad blocker blocker who blocked me using ublock origin. After enabling the anti ad blocker never bothered me again and since i have other user scripts and write my own occasionaly, tampermonkey isn't useless at all.
noScript has a very convienient menu and is superior to ublock regarding usability (when it comes to selectivly blocking scripts). No need to read a wiki. Therefore I prefer it.
I also use ghostery, ad-guard, and one that cleans trackers from linked urls. I forgot what it's called.
Just so you know ghostery sells your data to financial services firms
I surely hope you're not running those two next to uBO. Multiple ad blockers WILL conflict.
I have few profiles set up - stock, changed settings, different extensions...
I then use the one for the task I do - need to use Google I use Google profile, work stuff and simple search have different profiles ...
I use one of the security hardening user.js profiles as a baseline for Firefox e.g. https://github.com/pyllyukko/user.js
Beyond that I don't go crazy with extensions but I do still use NoScript to block javascript by default & only enable it for domains I choose. For ad blocking stuff I handle that at the router level with pfSense + the pfBlockerNG package.
I use AdGuard
I use idontcareaboutcookies and have Firefox delete all cookies when I close it. Although I think that addon was bought out a few months ago.
This is why now there is the other addon "I still don't care about cookies"
Chameleon for anti fingerprinting, ublock, clearurls, noscript
Really shouldn't use anything more than uBo since extensions make it easier to fingerprint you.
This is absolutely false. In a standard browser environment you are going to require a multitude of plugins to achieve various tasks. In fact; having uBo installed is in and of itself fingerprintable to the n^th^ degree. An advanced fingerprinting suite can glean data from your browser based on which uBo lists you subscribe to.
With the sole exception being purpose-hardened browsers like Mullvad's or Tor Browser; there is no reason to skip having plugins. You already fingerprinted yourself by running that one plugin.